The majority of quantum information tasks require error-corrected logical qubits whose coherence times are vastly longer than that of currently available physical qubits. Among themany quantum error correction codes, bosonic codes are particularly attractive as they make use of a single quantum harmonic oscillator to encode a correctable qubit in a hardware-efficient manner. One such encoding, based on grid states of an oscillator, has the potential to protect a logical qubit against all major physical noise processes. By stroboscopically modulating the interaction of a superconducting microwave cavity with an ancillary transmon, we have successfully prepared and permanently stabilized these grid states. The lifetimes of the three Bloch vector components of the encoded qubit are enhanced by the application of this protocol, and agree with a theoretical estimate based on the measured imperfections of the experiment.
In quantum mechanics, continuously measuring an observable steers the system into one eigenstate of that observable. This property has interesting and useful consequences when the observableis a joint property of two remotely separated qubits. In particular, if the measurement of the two-qubit joint observable is performed in a way that is blind to single-qubit information, quantum back-action generates correlation of the discord type even if the measurement is weak and inefficient. We demonstrate the ability to generate these quantum correlations in a circuit-QED setup by performing a weak joint readout of two remote, non-interacting, superconducting transmon qubits using the two non-degenerate modes of a Josephson Parametric Converter (JPC). Single-qubit information is erased from the output in the limit of large gain and with properly tailored cavity drive pulses. Our results of the measurement of discord are in quantitative agreement with theoretical predictions, and demonstrate the utility of the JPC as a which-qubit information eraser.
Large-scale quantum information processing networks will most probably require the entanglement of distant systems that do not interact directly. This can be done by performing entanglinggates between standing information carriers, used as memories or local computational resources, and flying ones, acting as quantum buses. We report the deterministic entanglement of two remote transmon qubits by Raman stimulated emission and absorption of a traveling photon wavepacket. We achieve a Bell state fidelity of 73 %, well explained by losses in the transmission line and decoherence of each qubit.
Quantum jumps of a qubit are usually observed between its energy eigenstates, also known as its longitudinal pseudo-spin component. Is it possible, instead, to observe quantum jumpsbetween the transverse superpositions of these eigenstates? We answer positively by presenting the first continuous quantum nondemolition measurement of the transverse component of an individual qubit. In a circuit QED system irradiated by two pump tones, we engineer an effective Hamiltonian whose eigenstates are the transverse qubit states, and a dispersive measurement of the corresponding operator. Such transverse component measurements are a useful tool in the driven-dissipative operation engineering toolbox, which is central to quantum simulation and quantum error correction.
Entangling two remote quantum systems which never interact directly is an essential primitive in quantum information science. In quantum optics, remote entanglement experiments providesone approach for loophole-free tests of quantum non-locality and form the basis for the modular architecture of quantum computing. In these experiments, the two qubits, Alice and Bob, are each first entangled with a traveling photon. Subsequently, the two photons paths interfere on a beam-splitter before being directed to single-photon detectors. Such concurrent remote entanglement protocols using discrete Fock states can be made robust to photon losses, unlike schemes that rely on continuous variable states. This robustness arises from heralding the entanglement on the detection of events which can be selected for their unambiguity. However, efficiently detecting single photons is challenging in the domain of superconducting quantum circuits because of the low energy of microwave quanta. Here, we report the realization of a novel microwave photon detector implemented in the circuit quantum electrodynamics (cQED) framework of superconducting quantum information, and the demonstration, with this detector, of a robust form of concurrent remote entanglement. Our experiment opens the way for the implementation of the modular architecture of quantum computation with superconducting qubits.