Unimon qubit
Superconducting qubits are one of the most promising candidates to implement quantum computers. The superiority of superconducting quantum computers over any classical device in simulating random but well-determined quantum circuits has already been shown in two independent experiments and important...
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Veröffentlicht in: | arXiv.org 2022-04 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Superconducting qubits are one of the most promising candidates to implement quantum computers. The superiority of superconducting quantum computers over any classical device in simulating random but well-determined quantum circuits has already been shown in two independent experiments and important steps have been taken in quantum error correction. However, the currently wide-spread qubit designs do not yet provide high enough performance to enable practical applications or efficient scaling of logical qubits owing to one or several following issues: sensitivity to charge or flux noise leading to decoherence, too weak non-linearity preventing fast operations, undesirably dense excitation spectrum, or complicated design vulnerable to parasitic capacitance. Here, we introduce and demonstrate a superconducting-qubit type, the unimon, which combines the desired properties of high non-linearity, full insensitivity to dc charge noise, insensitivity to flux noise, and a simple structure consisting only of a single Josephson junction in a resonator. We measure the qubit frequency, \(\omega_{01}/(2\pi)\), and anharmonicity \(\alpha\) over the full dc-flux range and observe, in agreement with our quantum models, that the qubit anharmonicity is greatly enhanced at the optimal operation point, yielding, for example, 99.9% and 99.8% fidelity for 13-ns single-qubit gates on two qubits with \((\omega_{01},\alpha)=(4.49~\mathrm{GHz}, 434~\mathrm{ MHz})\times 2\pi\) and \((3.55~\mathrm{GHz}, 744~\mathrm{ MHz})\times 2\pi\), respectively. The energy relaxation time \(T_1\lesssim 10~\mu\mathrm{s}\) is stable for hours and seems to be limited by dielectric losses. Thus, future improvements of the design, materials, and gate time may promote the unimon to break the 99.99% fidelity target for efficient quantum error correction and possible quantum advantage with noisy systems. |
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ISSN: | 2331-8422 |
DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2203.05896 |