Attempt to Violate the CHSH Bell Inequality in Josephson Phase Qubits
ORAL
Abstract
The violation of Bell's inequality is the primary argument against the possible existence of a hidden-variable-theory as an alternative to quantum mechanics. It also often serves as a convincing demonstration that a given system behaves in a truly non-classical way. There have been many proposals of different classically binding inequalities that quantum mechanics can violate. The most widely accepted forms follow closely along a correlation measurement proposed by Clauser, Horne, Shimony and Holt (CHSH) in 1969. Here we present our attempt to implement the CHSH Bell test using Josephson phase qubits. The nature of this experiment places high demands –-- compared to the current state of the art in solid state qubits –-- on qubit performance measures such as the energy relaxation time T1, the decoherence time T2, measurement fidelities, and the quality of single and two qubit operations. We will examine these demands and position our past and current qubit designs against them.
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Authors
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M. Ansmann
UC Santa Barbara
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R. Bialczak
U.C. Santa Barbara, UC Santa Barbara
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N. Katz
UC Santa Barbara
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E. Lucero
UC Santa Barbara
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R. McDermott
University of Wisconsin-Madison, University of Wisconsin
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Matthew Neeley
UC Santa Barbara
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A. O'Connell
UC Santa Barbara
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Matthias Steffen
UCSB, IBM, IBM
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E. Weig
UC Santa Barbara
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A. Cleland
University of California, Santa Barbara, UC Santa Barbara
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J. Martinis
Physics Department, University of California, Santa Barbara , Santa Barbara, California 93106, UC Santa Barbara