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Three addressable spin qubits in a molecular single-ion magnet

M. Jenkins, Yan Duan, B. Diosdado, J. Garc'ia-Ripoll, A. Gaita-Ariño, Carlos Gim'enez-Sa'iz, P. Alonso, E. Coronado, F. Luis·October 13, 2016·DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.95.064423
Physics

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Abstract

We show that several qubits can be integrated in a single magnetic ion, using its internal electronic spin states with energies tuned by a suitably chosen molecular environment. This approach is illustrated with a nearly-isotropic Gd(III) ion entrapped in a polyoxometalate molecule. Experiments with microwave technologies, either three dimensional cavities or quantum superconducting circuits, show that this magnetic molecule possesses the number of spin states and the set of coherently addressable transitions connecting these states that are needed to perform a universal three-qubit processor or, equivalently, a d=8-level 'qudit'. Our findings open prospects for developing more sophisticated magnetic molecules which can result in more powerful and noise resilient quantum computation schemes.

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