We examine the robustness of composite pulses to non-static classic noise in the NMR facility. Though these pulses are proposed to eliminate static, systematic errors, they are shown to be robust to time-varying noise...We examine the robustness of composite pulses to non-static classic noise in the NMR facility. Though these pulses are proposed to eliminate static, systematic errors, they are shown to be robust to time-varying noise with high-cut frequency up to near 10% of the Rabi frequency in a recent theoretical work. The CP pulses that are only robust to one kind of error have been implemented in various experiment platforms. In this paper we have compared the performance of reduced CinSK rc pulse, which is designed to cancel both the pulse length error and the off resonance error, to that of the primitive n pulse in a hybrid error environment. In order to achieve this target we have simultaneously injected noise to the RF output wave. The filter function formalism is employed to predict the evolution fidelity decay, which shows great consistency with the experiment data. Our work not only validates the superiority of reduced CinSK pulse but also indicates its sensitivity to the initial states, providing practical guidance in the noise suppression domain.展开更多
基金supported by the National Basic Research Program of China(Grants No.2015CB921002)the National Natural Science Foundation of China(Grant Nos.11175094 and 91221205)
文摘We examine the robustness of composite pulses to non-static classic noise in the NMR facility. Though these pulses are proposed to eliminate static, systematic errors, they are shown to be robust to time-varying noise with high-cut frequency up to near 10% of the Rabi frequency in a recent theoretical work. The CP pulses that are only robust to one kind of error have been implemented in various experiment platforms. In this paper we have compared the performance of reduced CinSK rc pulse, which is designed to cancel both the pulse length error and the off resonance error, to that of the primitive n pulse in a hybrid error environment. In order to achieve this target we have simultaneously injected noise to the RF output wave. The filter function formalism is employed to predict the evolution fidelity decay, which shows great consistency with the experiment data. Our work not only validates the superiority of reduced CinSK pulse but also indicates its sensitivity to the initial states, providing practical guidance in the noise suppression domain.