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artwork giving an impression of bitstrings, light and quantum
Credit: I believe this widely-used image is public domain; it was obtained by download in 2015; source unknown

Prof Andrew Steane

Professor of Physics

Research theme

  • Quantum information and computation

Sub department

  • Atomic and Laser Physics

Research groups

  • Ion trap quantum computing
Andrew.Steane@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72346,01865 (2)72385
Clarendon Laboratory, room 316.2
  • About
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  • Publications

Quantum computation with ions in microscopic traps

SUPERLATTICE MICROST 32:4-6 (2002) 195-213

Authors:

M Sasura, AM Steane

Abstract:

We discuss a possible experimental realization of fast quantum gates with high fidelity with ions confined in microscopic traps. The original proposal of this physical system for quantum computation comes from Cirac and Zoller (Nature 404, 579 (2000)). In this paper we analyse a sensitivity of the ion-trap quantum gate on various experimental parameters which was omitted in the original proposal. We address imprecision of laser pulses, impact of photon scattering, nonzero temperature effects and influence of laser intensity fluctuations on the total fidelity of the two-qubit phase gate. (C) 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Atomic cavities

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) (2002) 281-282

Authors:

CG Aminoff, P Bouyer, C Cohen-Tannoudji, J Dalibard, P Desbiolles, A Steane, P Szriftgiser
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Overhead and noise threshold of fault-tolerant quantum error correction

(2002)
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Quantum computer architecture for fast entropy extraction

Quantum Information and Computation 2:4 (2002) 297-306

Abstract:

If a quantum computer is stabilized by fault-tolerant quantum error correction (QEC), then most of its resources (qubits and operations) are dedicated to the extraction of error information. Analysis of this process leads to a set of central requirements for candidate computing devices, in addition to the basic ones of stable qubits and controllable gates and measurements. The logical structure of the extraction process has a natural geometry and hierarchy of communication needs; a computer whose physical architecture is designed to reflect this will be able to tolerate the most noise. The relevant networks are dominated by quantum information transport, therefore to assess a computing device it is necessary to characterize its ability to transport quantum information, in addition to assessing the performance of conditional logic on nearest neighbours and the passive stability of the memory. The transport distances involved in QEC networks are estimated, and it is found that a device relying on swap operations for information transport must have those operations an order of magnitude more precise than the controlled gates of a device which can transport information at low cost.
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The atomic nanoscope.

Nature 414:6859 (2001) 24-25
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