Quantum state reconstruction made easy: a direct method for tomography

  1. R.P. Rundle,
  2. Todd Tilma,
  3. J.H. Samson,
  4. and M. J. Everitt
In quantum mechanics, the state of the system, or set of systems, is encoded as a vector in a state space. While this sounds simple, it has several implications that are not limited

Some implications of superconducting quantum interference to the application of master equations in engineering quantum technologies

  1. S.N.A. Duffus,
  2. K.N. Bjergstrøm,
  3. V.M. Dwyer,
  4. J.H. Samson,
  5. T.P. Spiller,
  6. W. J. Munro,
  7. Kae Nemoto,
  8. and M. J. Everitt
In this paper we consider the modelling and simulation of open quantum systems from a device engineering perspective. We derive master equations at different levels of approximation

Feedback-controlled adiabatic quantum computation

  1. R. D. Wilson,
  2. A. M. Zagoskin,
  3. S. Savel'ev,
  4. M. J. Everitt,
  5. and Franco Nori
We propose a simple feedback-control scheme for adiabatic quantum computation with superconducting flux qubits. The proposed method makes use of existing on-chip hardware to monitor