A Millimeter-Wave Superconducting Qubit
Manipulating the electromagnetic spectrum at the single-photon level is fundamental for quantum experiments. In the visible and infrared range, this can be accomplished with atomic quantum emitters, and with superconducting qubits such control is extended to the microwave range (below 10 GHz). Meanw...
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Zusammenfassung: | Manipulating the electromagnetic spectrum at the single-photon level is
fundamental for quantum experiments. In the visible and infrared range, this
can be accomplished with atomic quantum emitters, and with superconducting
qubits such control is extended to the microwave range (below 10 GHz).
Meanwhile, the region between these two energy ranges presents an unexplored
opportunity for innovation. We bridge this gap by scaling up a superconducting
qubit to the millimeter-wave range (near 100 GHz). Working in this energy range
greatly reduces sensitivity to thermal noise compared to microwave devices,
enabling operation at significantly higher temperatures, up to 1 K. This has
many advantages by removing the dependence on rare $^3$He for refrigeration,
simplifying cryogenic systems, and providing orders of magnitude higher cooling
power, lending the flexibility needed for novel quantum sensing and hybrid
experiments. Using low-loss niobium trilayer junctions, we realize a qubit at
72 GHz cooled to 0.87 K using only $^4$He. We perform Rabi oscillations to
establish control over the qubit state, and measure relaxation and dephasing
times of 15.8 and 17.4 ns respectively. This demonstration of a millimeter-wave
quantum emitter offers exciting prospects for enhanced sensitivity thresholds
in high-frequency photon detection, provides new options for quantum
transduction and for scaling up and speeding up quantum computing, enables
integration of quantum systems where $^3$He refrigeration units are
impractical, and importantly paves the way for quantum experiments exploring a
novel energy range. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2411.11170 |