Universal singlet-triplet qubits implemented near the transverse sweet
spot
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2102.00406v2
- Date: Sun, 6 Jun 2021 11:11:40 GMT
- Title: Universal singlet-triplet qubits implemented near the transverse sweet
spot
- Authors: Wen-Xin Xie, Chengxian Zhang, Zheng-Yuan Xue
- Abstract summary: Key to realizing fault-tolerant quantum computation for singlet-triplet (ST) qubits in semiconductor double quantum dot (DQD)
operating the qubit near the transverse sweet spot (TSS) to reduce the leading order of the noise.
Applying modest pulse sequences, both single- and two-qubit gates are having fidelity higher than 99%.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: The key to realizing fault-tolerant quantum computation for singlet-triplet
(ST) qubits in semiconductor double quantum dot (DQD) is to operate both the
single- and two-qubit gates with high fidelity. The feasible way includes
operating the qubit near the transverse sweet spot (TSS) to reduce the leading
order of the noise, as well as adopting the proper pulse sequences which are
immune to noise. The single-qubit gates can be achieved by introducing an AC
drive on the detuning near the TSS. The large dipole moment of the DQDs at the
TSS has enabled strong coupling between the qubits and the cavity resonator,
which leads to a two-qubit entangling gates. When operating in the proper
region and applying modest pulse sequences, both single- and two-qubit gates
are having fidelity higher than 99%. Our results suggest that taking advantage
of the appropriate pulse sequences near the TSS can be effective to obtain
high-fidelity ST qubits.
Related papers
- Qubit readouts enabled by qubit cloaking [49.1574468325115]
Time-dependent drives play a crucial role in quantum computing efforts.
They enable single-qubit control, entangling logical operations, as well as qubit readout.
Qubit cloaking was introduced in Lled'o, Dassonneville, et al.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-05-01T15:58:25Z) - Hyper-entanglement between pulse modes and frequency bins [101.18253437732933]
Hyper-entanglement between two or more photonic degrees of freedom (DOF) can enhance and enable new quantum protocols.
We demonstrate the generation of photon pairs hyper-entangled between pulse modes and frequency bins.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-04-24T15:43:08Z) - Pulse-controlled qubit in semiconductor double quantum dots [57.916342809977785]
We present a numerically-optimized multipulse framework for the quantum control of a single-electron charge qubit.
A novel control scheme manipulates the qubit adiabatically, while also retaining high speed and ability to perform a general single-qubit rotation.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-03-08T19:00:02Z) - Two qubits in one transmon -- QEC without ancilla hardware [68.8204255655161]
We show that it is theoretically possible to use higher energy levels for storing and controlling two qubits within a superconducting transmon.
The additional qubits could be used in algorithms which need many short-living qubits in error correction or by embedding effecitve higher connectivity in qubit networks.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-02-28T16:18:00Z) - Fast parametric two-qubit gate for highly detuned fixed-frequency
superconducting qubits using a double-transmon coupler [0.0]
We numerically demonstrate a high-performance parametric gate for highly detuned fixed-frequency qubits.
We can achieve another kind of entangling gate called a CZ gate with an average fidelity over 99.99$%$ and a gate time of about 18 ns.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-12-14T02:10:20Z) - High fidelity two-qubit gates on fluxoniums using a tunable coupler [47.187609203210705]
Superconducting fluxonium qubits provide a promising alternative to transmons on the path toward large-scale quantum computing.
A major challenge for multi-qubit fluxonium devices is the experimental demonstration of a scalable crosstalk-free multi-qubit architecture.
Here, we present a two-qubit fluxonium-based quantum processor with a tunable coupler element.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-03-30T13:44:52Z) - Double-Transmon Coupler: Fast Two-Qubit Gate with No Residual Coupling
for Highly Detuned Superconducting Qubits [0.0]
tunable couplers have become a key component for realizing high-fidelity two-qubit gates in superconducting quantum computers.
We propose a design for this kind of tunable coupler, which is composed of two transmon qubits coupled through a common loop with an additional Josephson junction.
Controlling the magnetic flux in the loop, we can achieve not only fast high-fidelity two-qubit gates, but also no residual coupling during idle time, where computational qubits are highly detuned fixed-frequency transmons.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-03-22T04:11:30Z) - Coupling two charge qubits via a superconducting resonator operating in
the resonant and dispersive regimes [5.526775342940154]
We describe a new type of charge qubit formed by an electron confined in a triple-quantum-dot system.
We present the form for the long-range dipolar coupling between the charge qubit and a superconducting resonator.
We find that the fidelity for the iSWAP gate can reach fidelity higher than 99% for the noise level typical in experiments.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-12-28T07:49:41Z) - Charge noise suppression in capacitively coupled singlet-triplet spin
qubits under magnetic field [6.211541620389987]
We show that a range of nearly sweet spots appear in the coupled singlet-triplet qubit system when a strong enough magnetic field is applied externally.
We further demonstrate that ramping to and from the judiciously chosen nearly sweet spot using sequences based on the shortcut to adiabaticity offers maximal gate fidelities under charge noise and phonon-induced decoherence.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-11-18T16:36:50Z) - Universal non-adiabatic control of small-gap superconducting qubits [47.187609203210705]
We introduce a superconducting composite qubit formed from two capacitively coupled transmon qubits.
We control this low-frequency CQB using solely baseband pulses, non-adiabatic transitions, and coherent Landau-Zener interference.
This work demonstrates that universal non-adiabatic control of low-frequency qubits is feasible using solely baseband pulses.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-03-29T22:48:34Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.