arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:cond-mat/0601035AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Sensitivity and back-action in charge qubit measurements by a strongly coupled single-electron transistor

Neil P. Oxtoby, H. M. Wiseman, He-Bi Sun

Published 2006-01-03, updated 2006-04-28Version 2

We consider charge-qubit monitoring (continuous-in-time weak measurement) by a single-electron transistor (SET) operating in the sequential-tunneling regime. We show that commonly used master equations for this regime are not of the Lindblad form that is necessary and sufficient for guaranteeing valid physical states. In this paper we derive a Lindblad-form master equation and a corresponding quantum trajectory model for continuous measurement of the charge qubit by a SET. Our approach requires that the SET-qubit coupling be strong compared to the SET tunnelling rates. We present an analysis of the quality of the qubit measurement in this model (sensitivity versus back-action). Typically, the strong coupling when the SET island is occupied causes back-action on the qubit beyond the quantum back-action necessary for its sensitivity, and hence the conditioned qubit state is mixed. However, in one strongly coupled, asymmetric regime, the SET can approach the limit of an ideal detector with an almost pure conditioned state. We also quantify the quality of the SET using more traditional concepts such as the measurement time and decoherence time, which we have generalized so as to treat the strongly responding regime.

Comments: About 11 pages, 6 figures. Changes in v2: we made general improvements to the manuscript including, but not limited to(!), the removal of one reference, and modification of the footnotes
Journal: Physical Review B 74, 045328 (2006)
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:2001.07751 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (Published 2020-01-21)
Performance of the T-matrix based master equation for Coulomb drag in double quantum dots
arXiv:1210.5174 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (Published 2012-10-18)
Dynamics of heat transfer between nano systems
arXiv:1610.03329 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (Published 2016-10-11)
Magnetic resonance with squeezed microwaves
A. Bienfait et al.