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Author: Izmalkov_A
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Citation counts use data from CrossRef as provided by the publishers of the citing articles.
❖ 2005 and later content is hosted outside of PROLA.
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A. Izmalkov, S. H. van der Ploeg, S. N. Shevchenko, M. Grajcar, E. Il’ichev, U. Hübner, A. N. Omelyanchouk, and H.-G. Meyer
Show Abstract
We compare the results of ground state and spectroscopic measurements carried out on superconducting flux qubits which are effective two-level quantum systems. For a single qubit and for two coupled qubits we show excellent agreement between the parameters of the pseudospin Hamiltonian found using both methods. We argue that by making use of the ground state measurements the Hamiltonian of N coupled flux qubits can be reconstructed as well at temperatures smaller than the energy level separation. Such a reconstruction of a many-qubit Hamiltonian can be useful for future quantum information processing devices.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 101, 017003 (2008)
Cited 0 times
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S. H. van der Ploeg, A. Izmalkov, Alec Maassen van den Brink, U. Hübner, M. Grajcar, E. Il’ichev, H.-G. Meyer, and A. M. Zagoskin
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We have realized controllable coupling between two three-junction flux qubits by inserting an additional coupler loop between them, containing three Josephson junctions. Two of these are shared with the qubit loops, providing strong qubit-coupler interaction. The third junction gives the coupler a nontrivial current-flux relation; its derivative (i.e., the susceptibility) determines the coupling strength J, which thus is tunable in situ via the coupler’s flux bias. In the qubit regime, J was varied from ∼45 (antiferromagnetic) to ∼-55 mK (ferromagnetic); in particular, J vanishes for an intermediate coupler bias. Measurements on a second sample illuminate the relation between two-qubit tunable coupling and three-qubit behavior.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 98, 057004 (2007)
Cited 14 times
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M. Grajcar, A. Izmalkov, S. H. van der Ploeg, S. Linzen, T. Plecenik, Th. Wagner, U. Hübner, E. Il’ichev, H.-G. Meyer, A. Yu. Smirnov, Peter J. Love, Alec Maassen van den Brink, M. H. Amin, S. Uchaikin, and A. M. Zagoskin
Show Abstract
We present the first experimental results on a device with more than two superconducting qubits. The circuit consists of four three-junction flux qubits, with simultaneous ferro- and antiferromagnetic coupling implemented using shared Josephson junctions. Its response, which is dominated by the ground state, is characterized using low-frequency impedance measurement with a superconducting tank circuit coupled to the qubits. The results are found to be in excellent agreement with the quantum-mechanical predictions.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 047006 (2006)
Cited 24 times
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M. Grajcar, A. Izmalkov, S. H. van der Ploeg, S. Linzen, E. Il’ichev, Th. Wagner, U. Hübner, H.-G. Meyer, Alec Maassen van den Brink, S. Uchaikin, and A. M. Zagoskin
Show Abstract
We have demonstrated strong antiferromagnetic coupling between two three-junction flux qubits based on a shared Josephson junction, and therefore not limited by the small inductances of the qubit loops. The coupling sign and magnitude were measured by coupling the system to a high-quality superconducting tank circuit. Design modifications allowing to continuously tune the coupling strength and/or make the coupling ferromagnetic are discussed.
Phys. Rev. B 72, 020503 (2005)
Cited 11 times
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M. Grajcar, A. Izmalkov, and E. Il’ichev
Show Abstract
We show that an LC parametric transducer can be effectively used to monitor an adiabatic evolution of the superconducting flux qubit. We propose a scheme to measure the qubit’s state, which is a quantum nondemolition measurement. The scheme can be easily extended to a three-qubit system and allows the reading out of the qubits’ states while the system remains in the ground state. An implementation of the adiabatic quantum algorithm MAXCUT for three superconducting flux qubits is discussed.
Phys. Rev. B 71, 144501 (2005)
Cited 8 times
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A. Izmalkov, M. Grajcar, E. Il'ichev, Th. Wagner, H.-G. Meyer, A. Yu. Smirnov, M. H. Amin, Alec Maassen van den Brink, and A. M. Zagoskin
No abstract available.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 049902 (2004)
Cited 0 times
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A. Izmalkov, M. Grajcar, E. Il’ichev, Th. Wagner, H.-G. Meyer, A. Yu. Smirnov, M. H. Amin, Alec Maassen van den Brink, and A. M. Zagoskin
Show Abstract
We have studied the low-frequency magnetic susceptibility of two inductively coupled flux qubits using the impedance measurement technique (IMT), through their influence on the resonant properties of a weakly coupled high-quality tank circuit. In a single qubit, an IMT dip in the tank's current-voltage phase angle at the level anticrossing yields the amplitude of coherent flux tunneling. For two qubits, the difference (IMT deficit) between the sum of single-qubit dips and the dip amplitude when both qubits are at degeneracy shows that the system is in a mixture of entangled states (a necessary condition for entanglement). The dependence on temperature and relative bias between the qubits allows one to determine all the parameters of the effective Hamiltonian and equilibrium density matrix, and confirms the formation of entangled eigenstates.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 037003 (2004)
Cited 35 times
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M. Grajcar, A. Izmalkov, E. Il’ichev, Th. Wagner, N. Oukhanski, U. Hübner, T. May, I. Zhilyaev, H. E. Hoenig, Ya. S. Greenberg, V. I. Shnyrkov, D. Born, W. Krech, H.-G. Meyer, Alec Maassen van den Brink, and M. H. Amin
Show Abstract
We have observed signatures of resonant tunneling in an Al three-junction qubit, inductively coupled to a Nb LC tank circuit. The resonant properties of the tank oscillator are sensitive to the effective susceptibility (or inductance) of the qubit, which changes drastically as its flux states pass through degeneracy. The tunneling amplitude is estimated from the data. We find good agreement with the theoretical predictions in the regime of their validity.
Phys. Rev. B 69, 060501 (2004)
Cited 27 times
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E. Il’ichev, N. Oukhanski, A. Izmalkov, Th. Wagner, M. Grajcar, H.-G. Meyer, A. Yu. Smirnov, Alec Maassen van den Brink, M. H. Amin, and A. M. Zagoskin
Show Abstract
Under resonant irradiation, a quantum system can undergo coherent (Rabi) oscillations in time. We report evidence for such oscillations in a continuously observed three-Josephson-junction flux qubit, coupled to a high-quality tank circuit tuned to the Rabi frequency. In addition to simplicity, this method of Rabi spectroscopy enabled a long coherence time of about 2.5 μs, corresponding to an effective qubit quality factor ∼7000.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 91, 097906 (2003)
Cited 48 times
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Ya. S. Greenberg, A. Izmalkov, M. Grajcar, E. Il’ichev, W. Krech, and H.-G. Meyer
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Time-domain observations of coherent oscillations between quantum states in mesoscopic superconducting systems have so far been restricted to restoring the time-dependent probability distribution from the readout statistics. We propose a method for direct observation of Rabi oscillations in a phase qubit. The external source, typically in GHz range, induces transitions between the qubit levels. The resulting Rabi oscillations of supercurrent in the qubit loop induce the voltage oscillations across the coil of a high quality resonant tank circuit, inductively coupled to the phase qubit. It is the presence of these voltage oscillations in the detected signal which reveals the existence of Rabi oscillations in the qubit. A detailed calculation for zero and nonzero temperatures are made for the case of persistent current qubit. According to the estimates for decoherence and relaxation times, the effect can be detected using conventional rf circuitry, with Rabi frequency in the MHz range.
Phys. Rev. B 66, 224511 (2002)
Cited 11 times
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Ya. S. Greenberg, A. Izmalkov, M. Grajcar, E. Il’ichev, W. Krech, H.-G. Meyer, M. H. Amin, and Alec Maassen van den Brink
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We propose to investigate flux qubits by the impedance measurement technique (IMT), currently used to determine the current-phase relation in Josephson junctions. We analyze in detail the case of a high-quality tank circuit coupled to a persistent-current qubit, to which the IMT was successfully applied in the classical regime. It is shown that the low-frequency IMT can give considerable information about the level anticrossing, in particular the value of the tunneling amplitude. An interesting difference exists between applying the ac bias directly to the tank and indirectly via the qubit. In the latter case, a convenient way to find the degeneracy point in situ is described. Our design only involves existing technology, and its noise tolerance is quantitatively estimated to be realistic.
Phys. Rev. B 66, 214525 (2002)
Cited 23 times
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