Enumeration of all superconducting circuits up to 5 nodes
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2410.18497v1
- Date: Thu, 24 Oct 2024 07:35:23 GMT
- Title: Enumeration of all superconducting circuits up to 5 nodes
- Authors: Eli J. Weissler, Mohit Bhat, Zhenxing Liu, Joshua Combes,
- Abstract summary: Superconducting circuits can be used as amplifiers, transducers, and qubits.
We seek to catalog this design space by enumerating all superconducting circuits built of capacitors, inductors, and Josephson junctions.
- Score: 0.46873264197900916
- License:
- Abstract: Nonlinear superconducting circuits can be used as amplifiers, transducers, and qubits. Only a handful of superconducting circuits have been analyzed or built, so many high-performing configurations likely remain undiscovered. We seek to catalog this design space by enumerating all superconducting circuits -- up to five nodes in size -- built of capacitors, inductors, and Josephson junctions. Using graph isomorphism, we remove redundant configurations to construct a set of unique circuits. We define the concept of a ``Hamiltonian class'' and sort the resulting circuit Hamiltonians based on the types of variables present and the structure of their coupling. Finally, we search for novel superconducting qubits by explicitly considering all three node circuits, showing how the results of our enumeration can be used as a starting point for circuit design tasks.
Related papers
- Quantum circuits with multiterminal Josephson-Andreev junctions [0.0]
We explore superconducting quantum circuits where several leads are simultaneously connected beyond the tunneling regime.
We find situations of practical interest where the circuits can be used to define noise protected qubits.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-12-28T18:49:11Z) - CktGNN: Circuit Graph Neural Network for Electronic Design Automation [67.29634073660239]
This paper presents a Circuit Graph Neural Network (CktGNN) that simultaneously automates the circuit topology generation and device sizing.
We introduce Open Circuit Benchmark (OCB), an open-sourced dataset that contains $10$K distinct operational amplifiers.
Our work paves the way toward a learning-based open-sourced design automation for analog circuits.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-08-31T02:20:25Z) - Computer-aided quantization and numerical analysis of superconducting
circuits [0.0]
We present work utilizing symbolic computer algebra and numerical diagonalization routines versatile enough to tackle a variety of circuits.
Results from this work are accessible through a newly released module of the scqubits package.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-06-16T17:25:02Z) - Moving beyond the transmon: Noise-protected superconducting quantum
circuits [55.49561173538925]
superconducting circuits offer opportunities to store and process quantum information with high fidelity.
Noise-protected devices constitute a new class of qubits in which the computational states are largely decoupled from local noise channels.
This Perspective reviews the theoretical principles at the heart of these new qubits, describes recent experiments, and highlights the potential of robust encoding of quantum information in superconducting qubits.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-06-18T18:00:13Z) - Canonical Quantization of Superconducting Circuits [0.0]
We develop mathematically consistent and precise Hamiltonian models to describe ideal superconducting networks.
We pave the way on how to quantize general frequency-dependent gyrators and circulators coupled to both transmission lines and other lumped-element networks.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-04-19T15:58:16Z) - The superconducting circuit companion -- an introduction with worked
examples [0.0]
The tutorial is intended for new researchers with limited or no experience with the field but should be accessible to anyone with a bachelor's degree in physics.
The tutorial introduces the basic methods used in quantum circuit analysis, starting from a circuit diagram and ending with a quantized Hamiltonian.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-03-01T19:00:00Z) - Weyl Josephson Circuits [0.0]
We introduce Weyl Josephson circuits: small Josephson junction circuits that simulate Weyl band structures.
We first formulate a general approach to design circuits that are analogous to Bloch Hamiltonians of a desired dimensionality and symmetry class.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-08-31T17:24:41Z) - Coherent superconducting qubits from a subtractive junction fabrication
process [48.7576911714538]
Josephson tunnel junctions are the centerpiece of almost any superconducting electronic circuit, including qubits.
In recent years, sub-micron scale overlap junctions have started to attract attention.
This work paves the way towards a more standardized process flow with advanced materials and growth processes, and constitutes an important step for large scale fabrication of superconducting quantum circuits.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-06-30T14:52:14Z) - Waveguide Bandgap Engineering with an Array of Superconducting Qubits [101.18253437732933]
We experimentally study a metamaterial made of eight superconducting transmon qubits with local frequency control.
We observe the formation of super- and subradiant states, as well as the emergence of a polaritonic bandgap.
The circuit of this work extends experiments with one and two qubits towards a full-blown quantum metamaterial.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-06-05T09:27:53Z) - Circuit Quantum Electrodynamics [62.997667081978825]
Quantum mechanical effects at the macroscopic level were first explored in Josephson junction-based superconducting circuits in the 1980s.
In the last twenty years, the emergence of quantum information science has intensified research toward using these circuits as qubits in quantum information processors.
The field of circuit quantum electrodynamics (QED) has now become an independent and thriving field of research in its own right.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-05-26T12:47:38Z) - Hardware-Encoding Grid States in a Non-Reciprocal Superconducting
Circuit [62.997667081978825]
We present a circuit design composed of a non-reciprocal device and Josephson junctions whose ground space is doubly degenerate and the ground states are approximate codewords of the Gottesman-Kitaev-Preskill (GKP) code.
We find that the circuit is naturally protected against the common noise channels in superconducting circuits, such as charge and flux noise, implying that it can be used for passive quantum error correction.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-02-18T16:45:09Z)
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.