Control and Characterization of the Central Spin System
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Date
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Advisor
Cory, David
Journal Title
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Publisher
University of Waterloo
Abstract
Precise, coherent, robust quantum control and characterization of quantum systems
play important roles in the development of applications of quantum technologies. In particular,
advancing the quality of control requires precise characterization, which, in turn,
depends on the quality of control.
In the first part of the thesis, we introduce a general framework for designing efficient,
precise, and robust quantum control strategies using effective Hamiltonian engineering.
The methods enable designs that are robust to systematic control errors and variations
in the Hamiltonian. The efficiency benefit of achieving control at zeroth order in the
Magnus expansion is highlighted. Design tools, such as methods that identify the space of
achievable effective Hamiltonians at each order from the Magnus expansion, are introduced.
Objective functions for engineering arbitrary effective Hamiltonians are provided and can
be used by numerical optimizers for control sequence design.
The second part of the thesis explores the characterization of general noise models
based on experiments on a central spin system. The noise is probed through stimulated
echo experiments, multi-dimensional correlation spectroscopy, and multi-quantum
experiments to characterize system/environment correlation and environmental memory
effects. Combined with Bayesian inference, these experiments provide quantitative measures
of correlation growth, environmental mixing, and deviations from stochastic noise
models. Measures that influence the choice of control schemes include non-Gaussianity,
non-stationarity, and non-Markovianity. The multi-quantum experiments can also reveal
an extended environment and show how the environmental mixing propagates quantum
information throughout the environment.