Probing Environmental Spin Polarization with Superconducting Flux Qubits

  1. T. Lanting,
  2. M.H. Amin,
  3. C. Baron,
  4. M. Babcock,
  5. J. Boschee,
  6. S. Boixo,
  7. V. N. Smelyanskiy,
  8. M. Foygel,
  9. and A. G. Petukhov
We present measurements of the dynamics of a polarized magnetic environment coupled to the We present measurements of the dynamics of a polarized magnetic environment coupled to the
flux degree of freedom of rf-SQUID flux qubits. The qubits are used as both sources of polarizing field and detectors of the environmental polarization. We probe dynamics at timescales from 5\,μs to 5\,ms and at temperatures between 12.5 and 22 mK. The measured polarization versus temperature provides strong evidence for a phase transition at a temperature of 5.7±0.3 mK. Furthermore, the environmental polarization grows initially as t√, consistent with spin diffusion dynamics. However, spin diffusion model deviates from data at long timescales, suggesting that a different phenomenon is responsible for the low-frequency behavior. A simple 1/f model can fit the data at all time scales but it requires empirical low- and high-frequency cutoffs. We argue that these results are consistent with an environment comprised of random clusters of spins, with fast spin diffusion dynamics within the clusters and slow fluctuations of the total moments of the clusters.

Demonstration of nonstoquastic Hamiltonian in coupled superconducting flux qubits

  1. I. Ozfidan,
  2. C. Deng,
  3. A. Y. Smirnov,
  4. T. Lanting,
  5. R. Harris,
  6. L. Swenson,
  7. J. Whittaker,
  8. F. Altomare,
  9. M. Babcock,
  10. C. Baron,
  11. A.J. Berkley,
  12. K. Boothby,
  13. H. Christiani,
  14. P. Bunyk,
  15. C. Enderud,
  16. B. Evert,
  17. M. Hager,
  18. J. Hilton,
  19. S. Huang,
  20. E. Hoskinson,
  21. M.W. Johnson,
  22. K. Jooya,
  23. E. Ladizinsky,
  24. N. Ladizinsky,
  25. R. Li,
  26. A. MacDonald,
  27. D. Marsden,
  28. G. Marsden,
  29. T. Medina,
  30. R. Molavi,
  31. R. Neufeld,
  32. M. Nissen,
  33. M. Norouzpour,
  34. T. Oh,
  35. I. Pavlov,
  36. I. Perminov,
  37. G. Poulin-Lamarre,
  38. M. Reis,
  39. T. Prescott,
  40. C. Rich,
  41. Y. Sato,
  42. G. Sterling,
  43. N. Tsai,
  44. M. Volkmann,
  45. W. Wilkinson,
  46. J. Yao,
  47. and M.H. Amin
Quantum annealing (QA) is a heuristic algorithm for finding low-energy configurations of a system, with applications in optimization, machine learning, and quantum simulation. Up to
now, all implementations of QA have been limited to qubits coupled via a single degree of freedom. This gives rise to a stoquastic Hamiltonian that has no sign problem in quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) simulations. In this paper, we report implementation and measurements of two superconducting flux qubits coupled via two canonically conjugate degrees of freedom (charge and flux) to achieve a nonstoquastic Hamiltonian. Such coupling can enhance performance of QA processors, extend the range of quantum simulations. We perform microwave spectroscopy to extract circuit parameters and show that the charge coupling manifests itself as a YY interaction in the computational basis. We observe destructive interference in quantum coherent oscillations between the computational basis states of the two-qubit system. Finally, we show that the extracted Hamiltonian is nonstoquastic over a wide range of parameters.

A frequency and sensitivity tunable microresonator array for high-speed quantum processor readout

  1. J. D. Whittaker,
  2. L. J. Swenson,
  3. M. H. Volkmann,
  4. P. Spear,
  5. F. Altomare,
  6. A.J. Berkley,
  7. B. Bumble,
  8. P. Bunyk,
  9. P. K. Day,
  10. B. H. Eom,
  11. R. Harris,
  12. J.P. Hilton,
  13. E. Hoskinson,
  14. M.W. Johnson,
  15. A. Kleinsasser,
  16. E. Ladizinsky,
  17. T. Lanting,
  18. T. Oh,
  19. I. Perminov,
  20. E. Tolkacheva,
  21. and J. Yao
Superconducting microresonators have been successfully utilized as detection elements for a wide variety of applications. With multiplexing factors exceeding 1,000 detectors per transmission
line, they are the most scalable low-temperature detector technology demonstrated to date. For high-throughput applications, fewer detectors can be coupled to a single wire but utilize a larger per-detector bandwidth. For all existing designs, fluctuations in fabrication tolerances result in a non-uniform shift in resonance frequency and sensitivity, which ultimately limits the efficiency of band-width utilization. Here we present the design, implementation, and initial characterization of a superconducting microresonator readout integrating two tunable inductances per detector. We demonstrate that these tuning elements provide independent control of both the detector frequency and sensitivity, allowing us to maximize the transmission line bandwidth utilization. Finally we discuss the integration of these detectors in a multilayer fabrication stack for high-speed readout of the D-Wave quantum processor, highlighting the use of control and routing circuitry composed of single flux-quantum loops to minimize the number of control wires at the lowest temperature stage.

Architectural considerations in the design of a superconducting quantum annealing processor

  1. P. I. Bunyk,
  2. E. Hoskinson,
  3. M.W. Johnson,
  4. E. Tolkacheva,
  5. F. Altomare,
  6. A.J. Berkley,
  7. R. Harris,
  8. J.P. Hilton,
  9. T. Lanting,
  10. and J. Whittaker
. Implementing"]this type of processor at a scale of 512 qubits and 1472 programmable inter-qubit couplers and operating at ~ 20 mK has required attention to a number of considerations that one may ignore at the smaller scale of a few dozen or so devices. Here we discuss some of these considerations, and the delicate balance necessary for the construction of a practical processor that respects the demanding physical requirements imposed by a quantum algorithm. In particular we will review some of the design trade-offs at play in the floor-planning of the physical layout, driven by the desire to have an algorithmically useful set of inter-qubit couplers, and the simultaneous need to embed programmable control circuitry into the processor fabric. In this context we have developed a new ultra-low power embedded superconducting digital-to-analog flux converters (DACs) used to program the processor with zero static power dissipation, optimized to achieve maximum flux storage density per unit area. The 512 single-stage, 3520 two-stage, and 512 three-stage flux-DACs are controlled with an XYZ addressing scheme requiring 56 wires. Our estimate of on-chip dissipated energy for worst-case reprogramming of the whole processor is ~ 65 fJ. Several chips based on this architecture have been fabricated and operated successfully at our facility, as well as two outside facilities (see for example [2]).

Entanglement in a quantum annealing processor

  1. T. Lanting,
  2. A.J. Przybysz,
  3. A. Yu. Smirnov,
  4. F.M. Spedalieri,
  5. M.H. Amin,
  6. A.J. Berkley,
  7. R. Harris,
  8. F. Altomare,
  9. S. Boixo,
  10. P. Bunyk,
  11. N. Dickson,
  12. C. Enderud,
  13. J.P. Hilton,
  14. E. Hoskinson,
  15. M.W. Johnson,
  16. E. Ladizinsky,
  17. N. Ladizinsky,
  18. R. Neufeld,
  19. T. Oh,
  20. I. Perminov,
  21. C. Rich,
  22. M.C. Thom,
  23. E. Tolkacheva,
  24. S. Uchaikin,
  25. A.B. Wilson,
  26. and G. Rose
Entanglement lies at the core of quantum algorithms designed to solve problems that are intractable by classical approaches. One such algorithm, quantum annealing (QA), provides a promising
path to a practical quantum processor. We have built a series of scalable QA processors consisting of networks of manufactured interacting spins (qubits). Here, we use qubit tunneling spectroscopy to measure the energy eigenspectrum of two- and eight-qubit systems within one such processor, demonstrating quantum coherence in these systems. We present experimental evidence that, during a critical portion of QA, the qubits become entangled and that entanglement persists even as these systems reach equilibrium with a thermal environment. Our results provide an encouraging sign that QA is a viable technology for large-scale quantum computing.