Abstract
Entangled coherent states play pivotal roles in various fields such as quantum computation, quantum communication, and quantum sensing. We experimentally demonstrate the generation of entangled coherent states with the two-dimensional motion of a trapped ion system. Using Raman transitions with appropriate detunings, we simultaneously drive the red and blue sidebands of the two transverse axes of a single trapped ion and observe multi-periodic entanglement and disentanglement of its spin and two-dimensional motion. Then, by measuring the spin state, we herald entangled coherent states of the transverse motions of the trapped ion and observe the corresponding modulation in the parity of the phonon distribution of one of the harmonic oscillators. Lastly, we trap two ions in a linear chain and realize Mølmer–Sørensen gate using two-dimensional motion.
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Introduction
For the last few decades, the coherent state has been the subject of intense theoretical and experimental investigation1. It is considered to be a quantum state with the most classical properties because its spread is the minimal allowed by the uncertainty principle and its trajectory of time evolution is identical to that of the classical harmonic oscillator2. Its multipartite extension, the entangled coherent state, has been a useful theoretical tool in various fields of quantum optics as it is the entangled superposition of the most “classical” quantum states. It has been used in theoretical studies concerning quantum information processing3,4,5,6,7,8,9, quantum metrology10, and fundamental tests of physics such as Bell’s inequality and Leggett’s inequality11,12. Despite their sensitivity to decoherence, entangled coherent states have been experimentally realized in a few experiments involving photons13 and superconducting circuits14,15. The trapped ion has been an extremely valuable tool for studying the quantum world because it is highly isolated from the environment yet can be precisely controlled. The single-mode superposition of coherent states or cat states have been realized in trapped ion systems in various experiments using the motional state of the trapped ion16,17,18,19,20. There have been several theoretical works on the implementation of entangled coherent states in trapped ion systems21,22,23,24, but none have been experimentally implemented so far.
In this work, we report on the realization of entangled coherent states with the two dimensional motion of a trapped ion. We implement the simultaneous spin-dependent force (SDF) on the ion in the two principal axes (X and Y) by making the transverse trap potential nearly isotropic so that the secular frequencies of the X and Y modes are very close. By choosing a laser detuning between the X and Y mode frequencies and driving a bichromatic transition with the blue and red sidebands, we excite the motional modes in the two radial directions concurrently with varying ratios of coupling strengths to each mode.
For a single ion, we generate Lissajous-curve-like motion in two dimensions with various commensurate oscillation periods in each direction and observe corresponding periodic variation in the spin state25. With mid-circuit measurement, we decouple the spin from the motion and herald the entangled coherent state of motion in two transverse axes. We conduct a basic characterization of the quantum state by observing the modulation of phonon number parity, which results from the periodic entanglement and disentanglement of the two motional modes. Fully characterizing the quantum state will need a multi-mode quantum state tomography, whose possible implementation is suggested in the “Discussion” section. Also, in an ion chain consisting of two ions, we demonstrate the successful generation of a Bell state using Mølmer–Sørensen interaction where the geometric phase is accumulated via motion in two spatial dimensions, which reduces the required Rabi frequency compared to the one-dimension case.
Results
We trap \({}^{171} \mathrm {Yb^{+}}\) ions in the center of a blade-type trap with dimensions specified in Fig. 1a26,27. A radio-frequency (RF) voltage oscillating at 15.3 MHz is applied to the RF blades for radial confinement, and the other two blades are grounded. A DC offset voltage can be applied to the RF blades to rotate the radial principal axes and change the separation between the X and Y mode secular frequencies. The amplitude of the RF field is actively stabilized by a PID controller28. As can be seen in Fig. 1b, c, the mean secular frequency for the radial modes is typically set to around \(\omega _{X,Y}\simeq 2\pi \times 1250\) kHz. The exact value changes by a few kHz every day due to the thermal drift of the RF voltage sampling29. The degeneracy of the transverse axes is lifted by \(2\pi \times 27.8\) kHz, with the Y axis frequency higher. A DC voltage of 1300 V is applied to the endcap electrodes, and the resulting axial secular frequency is \(\omega _{Z}=2\pi \times 120\pm 0.12\) kHz. The qubit states are defined as \(\left| \downarrow \right\rangle =\left| S_{1/2}, F=0, m_{F}=0 \right\rangle\) and \(\left| \uparrow \right\rangle =\left| S_{1/2}, F=1, m_{F}=0 \right\rangle\). For experiments involving a single ion, the qubit state is measured by the standard fluorescence detection method30. For a two-ion chain, we use histogram fitting to infer the population of the three possible classes of qubit states, {\(\left| \downdownarrows \right\rangle\)}, {\(\left| \downarrow \!\uparrow \right\rangle\), \(\left| \uparrow \!\downarrow \right\rangle\)} and {\(\left| \upuparrows \right\rangle\)}31.
The red sideband, blue sideband, and carrier transitions are implemented by applying appropriate detunings to the stimulated Raman transition32. It is realized by two perpendicular 355-nm pulsed laser beams which enter the trap from the bottom \((R_{V})\) and the side \((R_{H})\). Their relative frequencies and phases are controlled by acousto-optic modulators (AOMs). The Raman transition momentum vector \(\Delta \textbf{k}\) is perpendicular to the Z axis and has components in both radial axes with angles \(\theta _{Y}=24^{\circ }\) and \(\theta _{X}=66^{\circ }\) as shown in Fig. 1a. The angles are measured by comparing the blue sideband Rabi frequencies for the X and Y modes on their respective resonances. This results in asymmetric Lamb-Dicke factors, \(\eta _X = 0.05\) and \(\eta _Y = 0.11\), for the modes. The beating of the pulsed laser is stabilized by a feed-forward system which shifts the driving RF frequency of the AOM that controls the \((R_{V})\) beam33.
Entanglement of spin with multiple motional modes
We will use the notation \(\left| s \right\rangle \left| a \right\rangle \left| b \right\rangle\) to specify the quantum state of the system, where s denotes the qubit state of the ion chain with possible values of \(\uparrow\) and \(\downarrow\) for a single ion and their tensor product for a chain of two ions. a and b indicate the quantum states of the X and Y modes either in Fock state or coherent state basis. We realize the SDF Hamiltonian by driving the red and blue sidebands of the motional modes simultaneously with the same strength. When there is a symmetric detuning from the sidebands, the position of the wave packet in phase space is modulated by a frequency proportional to the detuning17, resulting in a circular trajectory as shown in Fig. 2e.
For a single trapped ion in a two-dimensional harmonic potential subject to a symmetrically detuned bichromatic beam, we have the following interaction Hamiltonian
where \(\eta _j\) and \(\delta _j\) are the Lamb-Dicke factor for the j-th axis and the detuning from the center-of-mass mode of the j-th axis, respectively. \(\hat{a_j}(\hat{a_j}^\dag )\) is the phonon annihilation (creation) operator for the j-th axis and \(\Omega\) is the Rabi frequency of the Raman transition. The motion and spin phase of spin-dependent interaction is proportional to the difference, \(\phi _M=(\phi _b-\phi _r)/2\), and sum, \(\phi _S=(\phi _b+\phi _r)/2\), of the laser phases for the blue and red sidebands, \(\phi _b\) and \(\phi _r\).
We will use \(\left| + \right\rangle =1/\sqrt{2}(\left| \downarrow \right\rangle +e^{i\phi _S}\left| \uparrow \right\rangle )\) and \(\left| - \right\rangle =1/\sqrt{2}(\left| \downarrow \right\rangle -e^{-i\phi _S}\left| \uparrow \right\rangle )\) to indicate the eigenstates of the \({{\hat{\sigma }}}_{\phi _S}\) operator. We assume \(\phi _S=0\) for simplicity. The X axis terms and Y axis terms act on their respective Hilbert spaces, yielding the following time evolution operator with displacements in X and Y phase spaces defined as \(\alpha \left( t\right) =\eta _X\Omega /(2\delta _X)\left( 1-e^{-i\delta _Xt}\right) e^{-i\phi _M}\) and \(\beta \left( t\right) =\eta _Y\Omega /(2\delta _Y)\left( 1-e^{-i\delta _Yt}\right) e^{-i\phi _M}\). The time evolution operator is \({\hat{U}}(t)=\left| + \right\rangle \left\langle + \right| {\hat{D}}_X(\alpha (t)){\hat{D}}_Y(\beta (t))+\left| - \right\rangle \left\langle - \right| {\hat{D}}_X(-\alpha (t)){\hat{D}}_Y(-\beta (t))\) where \({\hat{D}}_X(\alpha (t))\) and \({\hat{D}}_Y(\beta (t))\) are the displacement operators defined as \(e^{\alpha (t){\hat{a}}^\dag _X-\alpha (t)^*{\hat{a}}_X}\) and \(e^{\beta (t){\hat{a}}^\dag _Y-\beta (t)^*{\hat{a}}_Y}\). Applying this to the initial state of the ion, \(\left| \psi (t=0) \right\rangle =\left| \downarrow \right\rangle \left| 0 \right\rangle \left| 0 \right\rangle\), after sideband cooling and qubit initialization, we get the following wave function which exhibits spin-motion entanglement in both motional modes:
The time evolution of the spin state for various ratios of detunings to the X and Y modes, \(R=\delta _X/\delta _Y\), is presented in Fig. 2a–d. The dashed lines are fits to the following equation17
where \(\tau\) is an empirical decoherence rate and \({{\bar{n}}}_X\) and \({{\bar{n}}}_Y\) are mean phonon numbers of the X and Y modes, which in our system are \(\simeq 0.2\) and \(\simeq 0.1\), respectively. In each phase space, the wave packets periodically move in a circular trajectory whose period is defined by the inverse of the detuning of the bichromatic beam. When only one of the motional modes return to the origin in the phase space, the spin states only partially interfere and the measured spin state deviates from its original state, \(\left| \downarrow \right\rangle\). When the wave packets return to the origin in both phase spaces at the same time, the spin state fully returns to the initial state17.
Generation of entangled coherent state and observation of phonon number parity modulation
The tripartite entangled state of spin and the two motions can be transformed into an entangled coherent state (ECS) of the two motional degrees of freedom by projecting the spin state with mid-circuit measurement. Modifying this sequence to displace only a single motional mode will produce a single-mode cat state of motion, as experimentally shown by Kienzler et al. (see the Supplementary Material)20. We start the experimental sequence by cooling the ion to the ground state with sideband cooling pulses. Then we apply the two-mode SDF, which acts on both the X and Y motions simultaneously, for a duration of \(t_{SDF}\). In the following step, the ion is irradiated with a near-resonant 369.5-nm laser beam that serves as the detection beam. It is turned on for 500 \(\mu\)s, and the scattered photons are collected by a photomultiplier tube. We then drive a blue sideband Rabi oscillation on the Y mode for varying amounts of time and measure the spin state of the ion. This sequence is shown in Fig. 3a. We post-select the wave function with \(\left| \downarrow \right\rangle\) spin state which is heralded by the detection of less than two photons during the mid-circuit detection phase.
This results in the following wave function:
The complimentary data sets which have more than or equal to two photons detected correspond to the entangled coherent state with the opposite phase \(\left| \alpha (t) \right\rangle \left| \beta (t) \right\rangle -\left| -\alpha (t) \right\rangle \left| -\beta (t) \right\rangle\), but we choose not to use them because photon scattering affects coherence of motional states via recoil20. The blue sideband Rabi oscillation is then fitted to the following model to retrieve phonon number distribution of the Y mode20,34,35
where \(p_{Y,n}(t)\) is the population for n-phonon state in Y-motion after applying the SDF for t, and N is the maximum phonon number we consider, \(\Omega _{n+1,n}\) is the first order blue sideband Rabi frequency for n-phonon state, and \(\tau\) is the coherence time. When \(\alpha =0\), the wave function in Eq. (4) is reduced to a single-mode cat state of the Y mode \((\left| \psi _{Y}(t) \right\rangle =\left| \downarrow \right\rangle (\left| \beta (t) \right\rangle +\left| -\beta (t) \right\rangle )/\sqrt{2+2e^{-2|\beta (t)|^2}})\) and the phonon population is expected to be only in the even number states. However, for a non-zero \(\alpha\), the interference between the two coherent states with opposite phases in the Y phase space, \(\left| \beta \right\rangle _Y\) and \(\left| -\beta \right\rangle _Y\), is suppressed by the motion in the X-axis, \(\left| \alpha \right\rangle _X\) and \(\left| -\alpha \right\rangle _X\). Consequently, the parity of the Y mode population is modulated as the size of the displacement in the X mode changes. The resulting time evolution of the phonon population distribution is as follows.
where \(\left\langle n \right|\) is the n-th number state of the Y mode. Eq. (6) results in a modulation of phonon number parity defined as \(\Pi \left( t\right) =\sum _{n}{\left( -1\right) ^np_{Y,n}(t)}\), because the interference between the odd number states is suppressed by entanglement with the X mode. We include the effect of imperfect sideband cooling in the model, which leaves some population in the 1-phonon state (see Methods). We demonstrate the generation of entangled coherent states at various values of \(R=\delta _X/\delta _Y\). Fig. 3d corresponds to \(R=-2\), where the ion is periodically displaced in the X axis at a frequency which is twice of the frequency of the periodic displacement in the Y axis. Therefore, according to Eq. (6), the parity of the phonon distribution of the Y motion is expected to be modulated at half the period of its periodic displacement.
We repeat the same experiment with \(R=-2/3\). In this case, the parity modulation pattern is expected to span three periods of the Y displacement as shown in Fig. 3e. The observed variation in phonon number parity is in good agreement with the theoretical model, and is a direct consequence of the entanglement of the two motional modes. Fig. 3b, c are the two representative phonon distributions. The Y mode displacement is maximum for both, but the phonon number parity is \(0.89\pm 0.09\) for Fig. 3b and \(0.22\pm 0.06\) for Fig. 3c. Also, Fig. 3c shows a clear deviation from the single-mode cat state phonon distribution with a significant population in the \(\left| 1 \right\rangle _Y\) and \(\left| 3 \right\rangle _Y\) states. In Fig. 3d, e, we also plotted the time evolution of the mean phonon numbers of the Y mode, which approximately corresponds to the square of the absolute value of the displacement in the Y mode phase space. The theoretical curves for the mean phonon numbers of the X and Y modes are calculated by using the Rabi frequency and 1-phonon state population of each mode inferred by fitting the phonon number parity data.
Mølmer–Sørensen gate with two-dimensional motion
Next, we trap two ions in a linear chain and investigate how the two-dimensional coherent motion can be utilized in an ion chain by realizing Mølmer–Sørensen interaction36,37,38 involving modes from multiple principal axes. We first observe the time evolution of the two-qubit states under two-dimensional Mølmer–Sørensen interaction as shown in Fig. 4b, with the Rabi frequency and detuning calibrated to generate a Bell state (\(1/\sqrt{2}(\left| \upuparrows \right\rangle +\left| \downdownarrows \right\rangle )\)). Then we measure the fidelity of the resulting state by observing qubit state parity oscillation, which is implemented by applying a \(\pi /2\)-pulse that acts on both qubits and scanning its phase, \(\phi\)37. The results are shown in Fig. 4c. The time evolution and fidelity measurement is carried out at a detuning that satisfies \(R=-1/3\), which in this context is defined as the ratio between the detunings to the X-cm mode and the Y-tilt mode, \(\delta _{X_{cm}}/{\delta _Y}_{tilt}\). The measured gate fidelity is \(89.7\pm 0.6\) % which is comparable to our single axis Mølmer–Sørensen gate fidelity, \(93.2\pm 0.6\) %. This indicates that Mølmer–Sørensen interaction can be expanded into multiple dimensions naturally. Also, the gate Rabi frequency is reduced compared to the single axis case, because more phase spaces contribute to the geometric phase (\(\Phi _n(t)={\eta _{n1}\eta _{n2}/(2d_n)^2\left( d_nt-\sin \left( d_nt\right) \right) \Omega _0^2}\) where \(\eta _{n1}\) and \(\eta _{n2}\) are the Lamb-Dicke factors of each ion for the n-th mode, \(d_n\) is the detuning to n-th mode and \(\Omega _0\) is the Rabi frequency), as can be seen in Fig. 4a. This effect is most pronounced at \(R=-1/3\) where the geometric phase contribution is similar for both axes, thus the required Rabi frequency is reduced by a factor of \(\simeq 1/\sqrt{2}\). Here, the Rabi frequency needed to generate an equal superposition of \(\left| \downdownarrows \right\rangle\) and \(\left| \upuparrows \right\rangle\) using both axes is \(2\pi \times 86.1\) kHz, which is in agreement to the experimentally calibrated value of \(2\pi \times 81.3\pm 0.6\) kHz. This is \(28.3 \%\) lower compared to the Rabi frequency required using only the X axis, and \(30.1 \%\) lower compared to using only the Y axis, assuming the same gate time and gate detuning.
Discussion
In this work, we have demonstrated the generation of entangled coherent states with two-dimensional motion of a trapped ion. Our scheme uses the near-degeneracy of the transverse modes of a linear Paul trap to excite the two motional modes of a single ion simultaneously with detuned SDF, and does not require second order interactions or two-phonon interactions as proposed in21,22, which is advantageous in terms of the strength of the interaction. We observed a periodic modulation in the single-mode phonon number parity which is a direct consequence of the entanglement between the two phonon modes. The loss of parity information is analogous to the decoherence of the spin state when only the spin state is directly measured in a spin-motion entangled system17. We have also shown that Mølmer–Sørensen interaction with multiple ions can be easily realized with a lower laser power using a two-dimensional spin-dependent force.
The size of the phase space displacements produced in our experiment is mainly limited by the large Rabi frequency required to generate a strong SDF in both X and Y modes. For a SDF with non-zero detuning, the maximum displacement is limited because the phase space trajectory forms a circle with radius proportional to the inverse of the detuning. Thus, the maximum displacement can be increased by making the trap more isotropic in the transverse directions. Alternatively, one can apply a SDF resonant to both the X and Y modes, which can be realized by a tetrachromatic laser beam23. In this case the size of the displacement will increase linearly with \(t_{SDF}\) and the coupling of the laser to each mode. Another limiting factor is the difficulty of characterizing motional states with large displacements via blue sideband Rabi oscillation. States with larger displacement magnitude are harder to probe because the coherence time of a cat state scales inversely with the square of magnitude of displacement35.
The creation of an entangled coherent state with opposite phase, \(\left| \downarrow \right\rangle (\left| \alpha \right\rangle \left| \beta \right\rangle -\left| -\alpha \right\rangle \left| -\beta \right\rangle )\), is possible with a \(\pi\)-pulse phase-locked to the SDF preceding the mid-circuit measurement20. Also, using our scheme, up to 3N modes can be entangled for an N-ion chain when all the principal axes of the trapping potential are utilized. Especially, the generation of a tripartite entangled coherent state of the X, Y and Z modes, combined with a beam splitter interaction between the phonon modes39,40,41, will enable the quantum teleportation protocol in Ref.9 with a single trapped ion.
There have been proposals and experiments of a Ramsey-type matter-wave rotation sensor42,43, Rabi-type sensor44 and Rashba and Dresselhaus-type spin-orbit coupling for quantum simulation of topological insulators and Majorana fermions in which a single ion is coherently manipulated in two or more orthogonal spatial modes25. The coherent control of two-dimensional motion of a trapped ion demonstrated in this work can be applied to realize such experiments. Lastly, utilization of quantum motion in multiple axes for the realization of entangling gates can reduce the experimental overhead required to suppress interactions in multiple directions often employed in trapped ion quantum computing setups, such as asymmetric trap geometry45 and trap RF voltage offset46.
Lastly, the full characterization of the two mode entangled coherent state requires a form of quantum state tomography (QST)47,48,49,50. For a single motional mode of a trapped ion, QST has been successfully demonstrated using a number of different means to produce Wigner function, Husimi Q function and density matrix representations of bosonic quantum states. One of the most frequently used methods, which leverages the correspondence of the phonon distribution parity and Wigner function in phase space, cannot be realized in two modes as extending this method to two-mode quantum states requires a single shot detection of the joint phonon state parity of the two entangled modes. In an earlier realization of entangled coherent states, implemented with microwave cavities coupled to a transmon qubit, the authors were able to implement such quantum operations and thus obtain quantum state tomograms14,15. To the best of our knowledge such operation has not been conceived in the context of trapped ion experiments. We propose that the QST of the two-mode ECS can be done by measuring Wyle characteristic function of motion. It is the Fourier transform of Wigner function, and contains the same complete information about the quantum state under probe. QST with Wyle characteristic function was experimentally realized with single mode of motion of a trapped ion48. It can be readily expanded to two modes by sequentially applying a spin rotation and spin-dependent forces acting on each motional mode that transfer information about motional modes to the spin state, as theoretically suggested by Zheng et al.51. Another possibility is to measure the joint phonon population of the two modes, using sequential application of carrier and sideband \(\pi\) pulses as demonstrated by Shen et al.52.
Methods
Instruments
The pulsed laser beams are provided by a 355-nm mode-locked laser (Coherent, Paladin Compact 355-4000). Its repetition rate fluctuates around 120.1 MHz due to the thermal and acoustic perturbations in the laser cavity. The repetition rate is monitored by an ultrafast photodetector (Alphalas, UPD-30-VSG-P). The drift is compensated by an AOM in the path of the \(R_V\) beam whose RF frequency is updated at a rate of 50 kHz by a field-programmable-gate-array (Digilent, Arty-S7) running a custom PID program33. The RF trap voltage is sampled by a capacitive divider and rectified by a diode circuit29. The rectified voltage is fed to a high-speed PID controller (New Focus, LB1005-S), which controls the output power of the RF source to stabilize the trap RF voltage28.
Experimental protocol
To drive the two-dimensional motion of a single trapped ion along a closed trajectory, we first optimize the Raman detuning to a frequency where the phase space trajectories for the X and Y axis can be closed simultaneously. The protocol is as follows: (1) The ion is ground-state cooled by sequentially applying sideband cooling pulses to the X and Y modes. (2) The spin state of the ion is initialized to \(\left| \downarrow \right\rangle\) via optical pumping. (3) With the probe time set to \(T=2\pi \times N/(\omega _Y-\omega _X)\) where N is an integer, we scan the Raman detuning between \(\omega _Y\) and \(\omega _X\) and look for frequencies where the measured spin state is close to \(\left| \downarrow \right\rangle\), which indicates the simultaneous disentanglement of the spin from the motional states in the X and Y axes. (4) To balance the red and blue sideband transitions and calibrate out the differential Stark shift, the RF power and frequency for the transitions are fine-tuned individually to minimize the \(\left| \uparrow \right\rangle\) state population.
In the entangled coherent state experiment, we limit the Rabi frequency of the blue sideband transition used to probe the phonon distribution of the Y mode to about 5 kHz, so as not to excite the blue sideband transition of the X mode. At this value, the expected maximum amplitude of the X mode blue sideband Rabi oscillation is \(0.7 \%\), thus we did not include the excitation of the X mode in the phonon distribution analysis.
The relatively low frequency of the blue sideband Rabi oscillation means that even a small drift in the secular frequency of the trap can affect the phonon state estimation results. The trap RF power is stabilized by a PID loop, but it drifts slowly due to the temperature changes in the components of the PID circuit at a rate of 2 kHz/h in the worst case. Thus, we interleave a blue sideband Ramsey spectroscopy experiment with the main experiment for every data point in Fig. 3d, e, and monitored the change of secular frequency throughout data collection process. Data collection for each point in the figures takes about 5 min and for all the points in each plot about 2 h. We stop the experiment if the secular frequency of the Y mode changed from the calibrated value by more than 300 Hz. We recalibrate the frequencies for the blue sideband transition and the spin-dependent force, and then resume the experiment. With a Rabi frequency of 5 kHz and detuning of 300 Hz, the amplitude of the blue sideband Rabi oscillation decreases by \(0.4 \%\) and Rabi frequency increases by \(0.9 \%\), which are negligible for the purposes of our experiment. Also, we note that in the analysis of the blue sideband Rabi oscillation, we use the exact form of \(\Omega _{n+1,n}=\Omega _{0,0}\left\langle n+1 \right| e^{i\eta _Y({\hat{a}}^{\dag }_Y+{\hat{a}}_Y)}\left| n \right\rangle =\Omega _{0,0}exp{\left( -\eta _Y^2/2\right) }\eta _Y/\sqrt{n+1}{\ L}_n^1(\eta _Y^2)\) where \(\Omega _{0,0}\) is the carrier transition Rabi frequency with zero phonons, \(\eta\) is the Lamb-Dicke factor, and \(L_n^1\) is the generalized Laguerre polynomial of nth order53, since in our data the maximum value of \(\eta _Y\sqrt{2{{\bar{n}}}_Y+1}\) is about 0.33 where the Lamb-Dicke approximation becomes inaccurate.
Also, to eliminate the possibility of the slow drift during the experiment affecting the observed pattern of parity modulation, we conducted the experiment in randomized orders of \(t_{SDF}\). The full randomized sequences of \(t_{SDF}\) used for the data sets in Fig. 3d, e are available in the Supplementary Material.
Effect of finite temperature on phonon number parity
The measured maximum value of parity shown in Fig. 3 does not reach unity because of imperfect sideband cooling, which in our setup typically results in \({\overline{n}}_X\simeq 0.2\) and \({\overline{n}}_Y\simeq 0.05\) . This finite temperature effect is modelled by considering a mixed motional state with a population of \(p_{X,1}\) and \(p_{Y,1}\) in the first excited state of each mode and the rest in the motional ground states. We include the following three initial states in the model. (i) \(\left| 1 \right\rangle _X\left| 0 \right\rangle _Y\) with probability \(p_{X,1}\left( 1-p_{Y,1}\right)\), (ii) \(\left| 0 \right\rangle _X\left| 1 \right\rangle _Y\) with probability \(\left( 1-p_{X,1}\right) p_{Y,1}\), and (iii) \(\left| 0 \right\rangle _X\left| 0 \right\rangle _Y\) with probability \(\left( 1-p_{X,1}\right) \left( 1-p_{Y,1}\right)\). The \(\left| 1 \right\rangle _X\left| 1 \right\rangle _Y\) state is not considered since its probability is negligible. When the motional state is the n-th excited state, the effect of the displacement operator and the resulting phonon distribution can be calculated using number state representations of the displacement operator, \(d_{mn}^\alpha =\left\langle m \right| {\hat{D}}(\alpha )\left| n \right\rangle\). We employed the results of Cahil et al.54 to calculate \(d_{mn}^\alpha\).
For (i), the modified phonon distribution of the Y mode is as follows
For (ii),
The following weighted sum of the phonon distributions corresponding to the above three cases (Eqs. (7), (8) and (6)) were used to fit the parity modulation data and extract the Rabi frequency, \(p_{X,1}\) and \(p_{Y,1}\):
Data availibility
The datasets used and/or analysed during the current study available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by Institute for Information & communications Technology Planning & Evaluation (IITP) grant (No.2022-0-01040), the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant (No. 2020R1A2C3005689, No. 2022M3E4A1083521), and the Samsung Research Funding & Incubation Center of Samsung Electronics (No. SRFC-IT1901-09).
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H.J. designed, carried out and analyzed the experiments. J.Y.K. carried out the experiments and implemented the experimental control system and the feed-forward system. H.J., J.Y.K., J.E.K., W.H.C., and K.K. contributed to the setup of the experimental apparatus. H.J. wrote and edited the manuscript. T.K. supervised the experiment. All authors participated in the discussion of the experimental results.
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Jeon, H., Kang, J., Kim, J. et al. Experimental realization of entangled coherent states in two-dimensional harmonic oscillators of a trapped ion. Sci Rep 14, 6847 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-57391-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-57391-6
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