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We developed new methods to protect quantum information from errors using dynamical decoupling. These techniques suppress unwanted interactions, creating stable systems for quantum computing.

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Area of Science:

  • Quantum Information Science
  • Quantum Control
  • Quantum Optics

Background:

  • Decoherence is a major obstacle in quantum information processing.
  • Controlling complex quantum systems, especially continuous-variable ones, remains challenging.
  • Existing dynamical decoupling methods often struggle with specific types of system-bath interactions.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop efficient deterministic dynamical decoupling schemes for continuous-variable quantum systems.
  • To protect quantum information from decoherence induced by time-dependent quadratic system-bath interactions.
  • To homogenize multi-mode bosonic systems for robust quantum information encoding.

Main Methods:

  • Constructing deterministic dynamical decoupling schemes using a sequence of precisely timed pulses.
  • Targeting decoherence from quadratic system-bath interactions with analytic time dependence.
  • Employing tensor products of single-mode passive Gaussian unitaries and swap gates.

Main Results:

  • Suppression of system-bath interactions to Nth order using only N pulses.
  • Homogenization of a 2^{m}-mode bosonic system using (N+1)^{2m+1} pulses.
  • Achieving an effective evolution described by noninteracting harmonic oscillators with identical frequencies, up to Nth order.

Conclusions:

  • The developed schemes provide efficient protection for continuous-variable degrees of freedom.
  • The homogenized systems offer natural decoherence-free subspaces for quantum information encoding.
  • The required pulses are experimentally feasible, utilizing passive Gaussian unitaries and swap gates.