Selective Excitation of Superconducting Qubits with a Shared Control Line through Pulse Shaping

In conventional architectures of superconducting quantum computers, each qubit is connected to its own control line, leading to a commensurate increase in the number of microwave lines as the system scales. Frequency-multiplexed qubit-control addresses this problem by enabling multiple qubits to sha...

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Hauptverfasser: Matsuda, R, Ohira, R, Sumida, T, Shiomi, H, Machino, A, Morisaka, S, Koike, K, Miyoshi, T, Kurimoto, Y, Sugita, Y, Ito, Y, Suzuki, Y, Spring, P. A, Wang, S, Tamate, S, Tabuchi, Y, Nakamura, Y, Ogawa, K, Negoro, M
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Zusammenfassung:In conventional architectures of superconducting quantum computers, each qubit is connected to its own control line, leading to a commensurate increase in the number of microwave lines as the system scales. Frequency-multiplexed qubit-control addresses this problem by enabling multiple qubits to share a single microwave line. However, it can cause unwanted excitation of non-target qubits, especially when the detuning between qubits is smaller than the pulse bandwidth. Here, we propose a selective-excitation-pulse (SEP) technique that suppresses unwanted excitations by shaping a drive pulse to create null points at non-target qubit frequencies. In a proof-of-concept experiment with three fixed-frequency transmon qubits, we demonstrate that the SEP technique achieves single-qubit gate fidelities comparable to those obtained with conventional Gaussian pulses while effectively suppressing unwanted excitations in non-target qubits. These results highlight the SEP technique as a promising tool for enhancing frequency-multiplexed qubit-control.
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2501.10710