4.5 Article

Multiscale architecture for fast optical addressing and control of large-scale qubit arrays

Journal

APPLIED OPTICS
Volume 62, Issue 12, Pages 3242-3251

Publisher

Optica Publishing Group
DOI: 10.1364/AO.484367

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This paper presents a technique for rapid site-selective control of the quantum state of particles in a large array by combining a fast deflector and a relatively slow spatial light modulator (SLM). The use of SLMs for site-selective quantum state manipulation has been limited due to slow transition times. However, by partitioning the SLM into multiple segments and using a fast deflector, it is possible to substantially reduce the transition time and increase the number of quantum gates that can be performed.
This paper presents a technique for rapid site-selective control of the quantum state of particles in a large array using the combination of a fast deflector (e.g., an acousto-optic deflector) and a relatively slow spatial light modu-lator (SLM). The use of SLMs for site-selective quantum state manipulation has been limited due to slow transition times that prevent rapid, consecutive quantum gates. By partitioning the SLM into multiple segments and using a fast deflector to transition between them, it is possible to substantially reduce the average time increment between scanner transitions by increasing the number of gates that can be performed for a single SLM full-frame setting. We analyzed the performance of this device in two different configurations: In configuration 1, each SLM segment addresses the full qubit array; in configuration 2, each SLM segment addresses a subarray and an additional fast deflector positions that subarray with respect to the full qubit array. With these hybrid scanners, we calculated qubit addressing rates that are tens to hundreds of times faster than using an SLM alone.(c) 2023 Optica Publishing Group

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