Events

Graduate Program Events

<< Spring 2025 Summer 2025 Fall 2025 >>
Subscribe your calendar or receive email announcements of events
Utilizing the Quadrupole Transition for Cooling and Imaging of Cs Atoms
Date: Thursday, August 7th
Time: 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm
Place: 5310 Chamberlin
Speaker: Jacob Scott, Physics PhD Graduate Student
Abstract: Neutral atom quantum computing platforms depend on precise control and measurement of atomic qubits to realize high-fidelity operations at scale. This thesis presents a set of experimental and engineering contributions that address critical requirements on laser systems and light–atom interactions for advancing quantum control of cesium atoms.

It details the development of low-noise electronic feedback systems for laser frequency locking and magnetic field stabilization, engineered to support stable and low-noise experimental operation. It further introduces the design, implementation, and noise characterization of narrow-linewidth laser systems driving Rydberg-level transitions, which underpin high-fidelity two-qubit gates via the Rydberg blockade mechanism.

The work also establishes the electric quadrupole transition in cesium as a powerful tool for state-selective, background-free quantum state readout, achieving a classification fidelity of 0.9993 and an atom survival probability of 0.995. Additionally, it demonstrates that laser cooling on this transition effectively reduces post-optical pumping atom temperatures to 5.4 uK.

Collectively, these results advance the frontier of robust, high-performance control in cesium-based quantum computing and significantly expand the capabilities of neutral atom architectures.
Host: Mark Saffman
Add this event to your calendar