Patents by Inventor Geza Giedke

Geza Giedke has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 9317473
    Abstract: A quantum information processor (QIP) may include a plurality of quantum registers, each quantum register containing at least one nuclear spin and at least one localized electronic spin. At least some of the quantum registers may be coherently coupled to each other by a dark spin chain that includes a series of optically unaddressable spins. Each quantum register may be optically addressable, so that quantum information can be initialized and read out optically from each register, and moved from one register to another through the dark spin chain, though an adiabatic sequential swap or through free-fermion state transfer. A scalable architecture for the QIP may include an array of super-plaquettes, each super-plaquette including a lattice of individually optically addressable plaquettes coupled to each other through dark spin chains, and separately controllable by confined microwave fields so as to permit parallel operations.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 14, 2011
    Date of Patent: April 19, 2016
    Assignee: PRESIDENT AND FELLOWS OF HARVARD COLLEGE
    Inventors: Norman Y. Yao, Liang Jiang, Alexey V Gorshkov, Peter C Maurer, Geza Giedke, Juan Ignacio Cirac, Mikhail D. Lukin
  • Publication number: 20140025926
    Abstract: A quantum information processor (QIP) may include a plurality of quantum registers, each quantum register containing at least one nuclear spin and at least one localized electronic spin. At least some of the quantum registers may be coherently coupled to each other by a dark spin chain that includes a series of optically unaddressable spins. Each quantum register may be optically addressable, so that quantum information can be initialized and read out optically from each register, and moved from one register to another through the dark spin chain, though an adiabatic sequential swap or through free-fermion state transfer. A scalable architecture for the QIP may include an array of super-plaquettes, each super-plaquette including a lattice of individually optically addressable plaquettes coupled to each other through dark spin chains, and separately controllable by confined microwave fields so as to permit parallel operations.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 14, 2011
    Publication date: January 23, 2014
    Applicant: PRESIDENT AND FELLOWS OF HARVARD COLLEGE
    Inventors: Norman Y. Yao, Liang Jiang, Alexey Gorshkov, Peter C. Maurer, Geza Giedke, Juan Ignacio Cirac, Mikhail D. Lukin