Spectroscopy of a synthetic trapped ion qubit (1705.09736v1)
Abstract: ${133}\text{Ba}+$ has been identified as an attractive ion for quantum information processing due to the unique combination of its spin-1/2 nucleus and visible wavelength electronic transitions. Using a microgram source of radioactive material, we trap and laser-cool the synthetic $A$ = 133 radioisotope of barium II in a radio-frequency ion trap. Using the same, single trapped atom, we measure the isotope shifts and hyperfine structure of the $62 \text{P}{1/2}$ $\leftrightarrow$ $62 \text{S}{1/2}$ and $62 \text{P}{1/2}$ $\leftrightarrow$ $52 \text{D}{3/2}$ electronic transitions that are needed for laser cooling, state preparation, and state detection of the clock-state hyperfine and optical qubits. We also report the $62 \text{P}{1/2}$ $\leftrightarrow$ $52 \text{D}{3/2}$ electronic transition isotope shift for the rare $A$ = 130 and 132 barium nuclides, completing the spectroscopic characterization necessary for laser cooling all long-lived barium II isotopes.