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  1. Abstract

    Tavis-Cummings (TC) cavity quantum electrodynamical effects, describing the interaction ofNatoms with an optical resonator, are at the core of atomic, optical and solid state physics. The full numerical simulation of TC dynamics scales exponentially with the number of atoms. By restricting the open quantum system to a single excitation, typical of experimental realizations in quantum optics, we analytically solve the TC model with an arbitrary number of atoms with linear complexity. This solution allows us to devise the Quantum Mapping Algorithm of Resonator Interaction withNAtoms (Q-MARINA), an intuitive TC mapping to a quantum circuit with linear space and time scaling, whoseN+1 qubits represent atoms and a lossy cavity, while the dynamics is encoded through 2Nentangling gates. Finally, we benchmark the robustness of the algorithm on a quantum simulator and superconducting quantum processors against the quantum master equation solution on a classical computer.

     
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  2. Abstract

    Silicon carbide is among the leading quantum information material platforms due to the long spin coherence and single-photon emitting properties of its color center defects. Applications of silicon carbide in quantum networking, computing, and sensing rely on the efficient collection of color center emission into a single optical mode. Recent hardware development in this platform has focused on angle-etching processes that preserve emitter properties and produce triangularly shaped devices. However, little is known about the light propagation in this geometry. We explore the formation of photonic band gap in structures with a triangular cross-section, which can be used as a guiding principle in developing efficient quantum nanophotonic hardware in silicon carbide. Furthermore, we propose applications in three areas: the TE-pass filter, the TM-pass filter, and the highly reflective photonic crystal mirror, which can be utilized for efficient collection and propagating mode selection of light emission.

     
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  3. Abstract

    Triangular cross-section silicon carbide (SiC) photonic devices have been studied as an efficient and scalable route for integration of color centers into quantum hardware. In this work, we explore efficient collection and detection of color center emission in a triangular cross-section SiC waveguide by introducing a photonic crystal mirror on its one side and a superconducting nanowire single photon detector (SNSPD) on the other. Our modeled triangular cross-section devices with a randomly positioned emitter have a maximum coupling efficiency of 89% into the desired optical mode and a high coupling efficiency (>75%) in more than half of the configurations. For the first time, NbTiN thin films were sputtered on 4H-SiC and the electrical and optical properties of the thin films were measured. We found that the transport properties are similar to the case of NbTiN on SiO2substrates, while the extinction coefficient is up to 50% higher for 1680 nm wavelength. Finally, we performed finite-difference time-domain simulations of triangular cross-section waveguide integrated with an SNSPD to identify optimal nanowire geometries for efficient detection of light from transverse electric and transverse magnetic polarized modes.

     
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  4. Symmetry is an important and unifying notion in many areas of physics. In quantum mechanics, it is possible to eliminate degrees of freedom from a system by leveraging symmetry to identify the possible physical transitions. This allows us to simplify calculations and characterize potentially complicated dynamics of the system with relative ease. Previous works have focused on devising quantum algorithms to ascertain symmetries by means of fidelity-based symmetry measures. In our present work, we develop alternative symmetry testing quantum algorithms that are efficiently implementable on quantum computers. Our approach estimates asymmetry measures based on the Hilbert–Schmidt distance, which is significantly easier, in a computational sense, than using fidelity as a metric. The method is derived to measure symmetries of states, channels, Lindbladians, and measurements. We apply this method to a number of scenarios involving open quantum systems, including the amplitude damping channel and a spin chain, and we test for symmetries within and outside the finite symmetry group of the Hamiltonian and Lindblad operators.

     
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  5. We develop a wafer-scale process for nanofabrication of color center photonic devices in an arbitrary silicon carbide substrate using a reactive ion beam etching approach with a rotating tilted wafer.

     
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  6. We explore digital quantum simulation of the dynamics ofNemitters coupled to an optical cavity (Tavis-Cummings model) on superconducting quantum hardware and successfully mitigate errors using randomized compiling and noiseless output extrapolation methods.

     
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  7. Angle-etching fabrication produces state-of-the-art color center triangular nanophotonic devices. We uncover how the photonic band gap is formed in the triangular geometry and utilized for efficient detection from SiC waveguide into overlaid NbTiN detectors. 
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