Fast Logic with Slow Qubits: Microwave-Activated Controlled-Z Gate on Low-Frequency Fluxoniums

We demonstrate a controlled-Z gate between capacitively coupled fluxonium qubits with transition frequencies 72.3 and 136.3 MHz. The gate is activated by a 61.6-ns-long pulse at a frequency between noncomputational transitions |10⟩-|20⟩ and |11⟩-|21⟩, during which the qubits complete only four and e...

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Autores principales: Quentin Ficheux, Long B. Nguyen, Aaron Somoroff, Haonan Xiong, Konstantin N. Nesterov, Maxim G. Vavilov, Vladimir E. Manucharyan
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: American Physical Society 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/25e56d548f74432b9b79eb9e361e537e
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Sumario:We demonstrate a controlled-Z gate between capacitively coupled fluxonium qubits with transition frequencies 72.3 and 136.3 MHz. The gate is activated by a 61.6-ns-long pulse at a frequency between noncomputational transitions |10⟩-|20⟩ and |11⟩-|21⟩, during which the qubits complete only four and eight Larmor periods, respectively. The measured gate error of (8±1)×10^{-3} is limited by decoherence in the noncomputational subspace, which will likely improve in the next-generation devices. Although our qubits are about 50 times slower than transmons, the two-qubit gate is faster than microwave-activated gates on transmons, and the gate error is on par with the lowest reported. Architectural advantages of low-frequency fluxoniums include long qubit coherence time, weak hybridization in the computational subspace, suppressed residual ZZ-coupling rate (here 46 kHz), and the absence of either excessive parameter-matching or complex pulse-shaping requirements.