Floquet Analysis of Frequency Collisions
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2302.12816v1
- Date: Fri, 24 Feb 2023 18:51:32 GMT
- Title: Floquet Analysis of Frequency Collisions
- Authors: Kentaro Heya, Moein Malekakhlagh, Seth Merkel, Naoki Kanazawa, Emily
Pritchett
- Abstract summary: We propose a Floquet analysis of frequency collisions.
We show that the computational complexity of the collision analysis for a sparse qubit lattice is linear with the number of qubits.
Our proposed method advances our understanding of quantum control for quantum processors.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Implementation of high-fidelity gate operations on integrated-qubit systems
is of vital importance for fault-tolerant quantum computation. Qubit frequency
allocation is an essential part of improving control fidelity. A metric for
qubit frequency allocation, frequency collision, has been proposed on simple
systems of only a few qubits driven by a mono-modal microwave drive. However,
frequency allocation for quantum processors for more advanced purposes, such as
quantum error correction, needs further investigation. In this study, we
propose a Floquet analysis of frequency collisions. The key to our proposed
method is a reinterpretation of frequency collisions as an unintended
degeneracy of Floquet states, which allows a collision analysis on more complex
systems with many qubits driven by multi-modal microwave drives. Although the
Floquet state is defined in an infinite-dimensional Hilbert space, we develop
algorithms, based on operation perturbation theory, to truncate the Hilbert
space down to the optimal computational complexity. In particular, we show that
the computational complexity of the collision analysis for a sparse qubit
lattice is linear with the number of qubits. Finally, we demonstrate our
proposed method on Cross-Resonance based experimental protocols. We first study
the Cross-Resonance gate in an isolated three-qubit system, where the
effectiveness of our method is verified by comparing it with previous studies.
We next consider the more complex problem of syndrome extraction in the
heavy-hexagon code. Our proposed method advances our understanding of quantum
control for quantum processors and contributes to their improved design and
control.
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