High coherence 2D Kerr-cat qubit: Experimental realization and technical challenges (2/2)
ORAL
Abstract
The Kerr-cat qubit is a bosonic qubit in which the information is encoded in multi-photon cat states. The suppressed bit flip rate makes this qubit a promising candidate to implement quantum error correction codes tailored for noise-biased qubits. Moreover, its intrinsic nonlinearities enable fast logic gates and QND measurement. However, the strong two-photon pump drive, which stabilizes the cat-state, introduces both theoretical and practical challenges when large cat sizes or multi-qubit operations are desired. Here, we present an experimental realization of high-coherence Kerr-cat qubits in a 2D superconducting circuit. With a novel on-chip filter significantly increasing the qubit-pump coupling, we can generate large cats with smaller drive power and explore the bit-flip dependence on the cat size. With bit-flip times approaching 800us for a cat of size 11 photon our work paves the way towards high-coherence and scalable multi-qubit devices.
The talk is divided into two parts. This is the second part, which will discuss the fabrication, measurement, and experiment results
The talk is divided into two parts. This is the second part, which will discuss the fabrication, measurement, and experiment results
*This work was supported by the U.S. Army Research Laboratory and the U.S. Army Research Office under contract/grant number W911NF-22-1-0258.
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Presenters
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Bingcheng Qing
- University of California, Berkeley