Microwave-activated entangling gates for fluxonium qubits

ORAL

Abstract

The main qubit transition of the superconducting fluxonium circuit in its flux sweet spot is characterized by a low frequency and very long coherence time, which reaches 500 μs [1]. At the same time, the transition between the first and second excited states of the fluxonium is comparable to those in transmons: it has an order of magnitude higher frequency and stronger coupling to a microwave field, but shorter lifetime. In this talk, we analyze and compare two-qubit gates between such qubits activated by driving different transitions in the two-qubit spectrum. In one scheme [2], the microwave drive is applied in resonance with a higher-frequency transition leading outside of the computational subspace. In the second scheme, which is similar to the cross-resonance gate with transmons [3], the microwave drive is applied at a low frequency to keep the system in the computational subspace. We calculate fidelity metrics for both gates with decoherence effects accounted for.
[1] Long B. Nguyen, et. al., Phys. Rev. X (2019).
[2] Konstantin N. Nesterov, et. al., Phys. Rev. A 98, 030301 (2018).
[3] Jerry M. Chow, et. al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 080502 (2011).

*We acknowledge funding from the U.S. Army Research Office (Grant No. W911NF-18-1-0146).

Presenters

  • Yinqi Chen

    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
    • University of Wisconsin - Madison

Authors

  • Yinqi Chen

    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
    • University of Wisconsin - Madison
  • Konstantin Nesterov

    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
    • University of Wisconsin - Madison
  • Long Nguyen

    • Physics, Univ of Maryland-College Park
    • University of Maryland, College Park
    • University of Maryland - College Park
  • Aaron Somoroff

    • Physics, Univ of Maryland-College Park
    • University of Maryland, College Park
    • University of Maryland - College Park
  • Quentin Ficheux

    • University of Maryland, College Park
    • Université Lyon, ENS de Lyon, Université Claude Bernard, CNRS, Laboratoire de Physique,F-69342 Lyon, France
  • Ivan Pechenezhskiy

    • University of Maryland, College Park
  • Vladimir Manucharyan

    • Physics, Univ of Maryland-College Park
    • University of Maryland, College Park
    • University of Maryland - College Park
    • University of Maryland
  • Maxim G Vavilov

    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
    • Department of Physics, University of Wisconsin - Madison
    • University of Wisconsin - Madison