Frequency-tunable generation of a shaped microwave photon using a fixed-frequency transmon

ORAL

Abstract

A scalable quantum computer will likely require quantum communication between remote chips. Itinerant microwave photons in a coaxial cable are a promising medium for implementing such a communication scheme [1]. To achieve high-fidelity communication, the frequency and shape of the microwave photon should be precisely controlled. In the previous study, frequency-tunable elements were used to control the waveform of the photon. In contrast, we demonstrate the frequency-tunable generation of a shaped microwave photon without using frequency-tunable elements. By changing the frequency of the drive pulse that stimulates the emission of the photon, we tune the photon frequency in the range of the linewidth of a resonator that couples to the qubit. We confirm that the emitted photon is in the desired superposition state by performing a quantum state tomography using quadrature measurements assisted by a quantum-limited parametric amplifier. Our work provides a technique without additional flux lines to tune circuit frequencies, which leads to hardware-efficient quantum communication.

[1] P. Kurpier et al., Nature 558, 264 (2018)

*This research was supported by FoPM, WINGS Program, the University of Tokyo.

Presenters

  • Takeaki Miyamura

    • The University of Tokyo

Authors

  • Takeaki Miyamura

    • The University of Tokyo
  • Yoshiki Sunada

    • The University of Tokyo
  • Zhiling Wang

    • Tsinghua University
    • RIKEN Center for Quantum Computing
  • Jesper Ilves

    • The University of Tokyo
  • Kohei Matsuura

    • Dept. of Adv. Mater. Sci., Univ. of Tokyo
    • The University of Tokyo
    • University of Tokyo
  • Yasunobu Nakamura

    • Department of Applied Physics, The University of Tokyo, Japan; RIKEN Center for Quantum Computing, Japan
    • Univ of Tokyo
    • The University of Tokyo