We describe two schemes to manipulate the electronic qubit states of trapped ions independent of the collective vibrational state of the ions. The first scheme uses an adiabatic method, and thus is intrinsically slow. The second scheme takes the opposite approach and uses fast pulses to produce an effective direct coupling between the electronic qubits. This last scheme enables the simulation of a number of nonlinear quantum systems including systems that exhibit phase transitions, and other semiclassical bifurcations. Quantum tunnelling and entangled states occur in such systems.
We model the behavior of an ion trap with all ions driven simultaneously and coupled collectively to a heat bath. The equations for this system are similar to the irreversible dynamics of a collective angular momentum system known as the Dicke model. We show how the steady state of the ion trap as a dissipative many-body system driven far from equilibrium can exhibit quantum entanglement. We calculate the entanglement of this steady state for two ions in the trap and in the case of more than two ions we calculate the entanglement between two ions by tracing over all the other ions. The entanglement in the steady state is a maximum for the parameter values corresponding roughly to a bifurcation of a fixed point in the corresponding semiclassical dynamics. We conjecture that this is a general mechanism for entanglement creation in driven dissipative quantum systems.
We consider one source of decoherence for a single trapped ion due to intensity and phase fluctuations in the exciting laser pulses. For simplicity we assume that the stochastic processes involved are white noise processes, which enables us to give a simple master equation description of this source of decoherence. This master equation is averaged over the noise, and is sufficient to describe the results of experiments that probe the oscillations in the electronic populations as energy is exchanged between the internal and electronic motion. Our results are in good qualitative agreement with recent experiments and predict that the decoherence rate will depend on vibrational quantum number in different ways depending on which vibrational excitation sideband is used. ͓S1050-2947͑98͒01605-9͔
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