Certifying the quantumness of a nuclear spin qudit through its uniform precession

ORAL

Abstract

Spin precession is a textbook example of dynamics of a quantum system that closely mimics its classical counterpart. Here we challenge this view by certifying the quantumness of exotic states of a nuclear spin through its uniform precession. The key to this result is measuring the positivity, instead of the expectation value, of the x-projection of the precessing spin, and using a spin > 1/2 qudit, that is not restricted to semi-classical spin coherent states. The experiment is performed on a single spin-7/2 123Sb nucleus, implanted in a silicon nanoelectronic device, amenable to high-fidelity preparation, control, and projective single-shot readout. Using Schrödinger cat states and other bespoke states of the nucleus, we violate the classical bound by 19 standard deviations, proving that no classical probability distribution can explain the statistic of this spin precession, and highlighting our ability to prepare quantum resource states with high fidelity in a single atomic scale qudit.

*The research was funded by an Australian Research Council Discovery Project (grant no. DP210103769) and the US Army Research Office (contract no. W911NF-23-1-0113).

Publication: https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.07641

Presenters

  • Arjen Vaartjes

    • University of New South Wales

Authors

  • Arjen Vaartjes

    • University of New South Wales
  • Martin Nurizzo

    • UNSW
  • Lin Htoo Zaw

    • National University of Singapore
  • Benjamin Wilhelm

    • University of New South Wales
  • Xi Yu

    • University of New South Wales
  • Danielle Holmes

    • University of New South Wales
    • University of Melbourne
  • Daniel Schwienbacher

    • University of New South Wales
  • Anders Kringhoej

    • University of New South Wales
  • Mark Robert van Blankenstein

    • University of New South Wales
  • Alexander M Jakob

    • The University of Melbourne
    • University of Melbourne
  • Fay Hudson

    • UNSW, Diraq
    • University of New South Wales & Diraq
    • University of New South Wales
    • University of New South Wales, Sydney
  • Kohei M Itoh

    • Keio Univ
  • Riley Murray

    • Sandia National Laboratories
  • Robin Blume-Kohout

    • Sandia National Laboratories
  • Namit Anand

    • NASA Ames Research Center
  • Andrew S Dzurak

    • University of New South Wales
  • David Norman Jamieson

    • University of Melbourne
  • Valerio Scarani

    • Natl Univ of Singapore
  • Andrea Morello

    • University of New South Wales