Demonstration of a long-coherence dual-rail erasure qubit using tunable transmons
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
Quantum error correction with erasure qubits promises significant advantages over standard error correction due to favorable thresholds for erasure errors. To realize this advantage in practice requires a qubit for which erasure errors are the dominant error, and the ability to check for erasure errors without dephasing the qubit. We demonstrate that a "dual-rail qubit" consisting of a pair of resonantly-coupled transmons can form a highly coherent erasure qubit, where transmon T1 errors are converted into erasure errors and residual dephasing is strongly suppressed, leading to millisecond-scale coherence within the qubit subspace. We show that single-qubit gates are limited primarily by erasure errors while the residual error rates are ~ 40 times lower. We further demonstrate mid-circuit erasure detection while introducing < 0.1% dephasing error per check. Finally, we show that the suppression of transmon noise allows this dual-rail qubit to preserve high coherence over a broad tunable operating range, offering an improved capacity to avoid frequency collisions. This work establishes transmon-based dual-rail qubits as an attractive building block for hardware-efficient quantum error correction.
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Publication: H. Levine, A. Haim, et. al. arXiv:2307.08737 (2023)
Presenters
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Harry Levine
- AWS Center for Quantum Computing