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The Oxford 750MHz NMR Spectrometer

The Oxford 750MHz NMR Spectrometer

Prof Jonathan Jones

Professor of Physics

Research theme

  • Quantum information and computation

Sub department

  • Atomic and Laser Physics

Research groups

  • NMR quantum computing
jonathan.jones@physics.ox.ac.uk
  • About
  • Publications

Experimental heat-bath cooling of spins

The European Physical Journal Plus Springer Nature 129:12 (2014) 266

Authors:

G Brassard, Y Elias, JM Fernandez, H Gilboa, JA Jones, T Mor, Y Weinstein, L Xiao
More details from the publisher
Details from ArXiV

Composite pulses for interferometry in a thermal cold atom cloud

Physical Review A American Physical Society (APS) 90:3 (2014) 033608

Authors:

Alexander Dunning, Rachel Gregory, James Bateman, Nathan Cooper, Matthew Himsworth, Jonathan A Jones, Tim Freegarde
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Composite pulses for interferometry in a thermal cold atom cloud

(2014)

Authors:

Alexander Dunning, Rachel Gregory, James Bateman, Nathan Cooper, Matthew Himsworth, Jonathan A Jones, Tim Freegarde
More details from the publisher

Experimental Heat-Bath Cooling of Spins

(2014)

Authors:

Gilles Brassard, Yuval Elias, José M Fernandez, Haggai Gilboa, Jonathan A Jones, Tal Mor, Yossi Weinstein, Li Xiao
More details from the publisher

Further analysis of some symmetric and antisymmetric composite pulses for tackling pulse strength errors.

J Magn Reson 230 (2013) 145-154

Authors:

Sami Husain, Minaru Kawamura, Jonathan A Jones

Abstract:

Composite pulses have found widespread use in both conventional Nuclear Magnetic Resonance experiments and in experimental quantum information processing to reduce the effects of systematic errors. Here we describe several families of time symmetric and antisymmetric fully compensating composite pulses, inspired by the previous Fn, Gn and BB1 families family developed by Wimperis. We describe families of composite 180° pulses (not gates) which exhibit unprecedented tolerance of pulse strength errors without unreasonable sensitivity to off-resonance errors, and related families with more exotic tailored responses. Next we address the problem of extending these methods to other rotation angles, and discuss numerical results for 90° pulses. Finally we demonstrate the performance of some 90° and 180° pulses in NMR experiments.
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More details
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