Resisting high-energy impact events through gap engineering in superconducting qubit arrays

  1. Matt McEwen,
  2. Kevin C. Miao,
  3. Juan Atalaya,
  4. Alex Bilmes,
  5. Alex Crook,
  6. Jenna Bovaird,
  7. John Mark Kreikebaum,
  8. Nicholas Zobrist,
  9. Evan Jeffrey,
  10. Bicheng Ying,
  11. Andreas Bengtsson,
  12. Hung-Shen Chang,
  13. Andrew Dunsworth,
  14. Julian Kelly,
  15. Yaxing Zhang,
  16. Ebrahim Forati,
  17. Rajeev Acharya,
  18. Justin Iveland,
  19. Wayne Liu,
  20. Seon Kim,
  21. Brian Burkett,
  22. Anthony Megrant,
  23. Yu Chen,
  24. Charles Neill,
  25. Daniel Sank,
  26. Michel Devoret,
  27. and Alex Opremcak
Quantum error correction (QEC) provides a practical path to fault-tolerant quantum computing through scaling to large qubit numbers, assuming that physical errors are sufficiently uncorrelated

Measurement-Induced State Transitions in a Superconducting Qubit: Within the Rotating Wave Approximation

  1. Mostafa Khezri,
  2. Alex Opremcak,
  3. Zijun Chen,
  4. Andreas Bengtsson,
  5. Theodore White,
  6. Ofer Naaman,
  7. Rajeev Acharya,
  8. Kyle Anderson,
  9. Markus Ansmann,
  10. Frank Arute,
  11. Kunal Arya,
  12. Abraham Asfaw,
  13. Joseph C Bardin,
  14. Alexandre Bourassa,
  15. Jenna Bovaird,
  16. Leon Brill,
  17. Bob B. Buckley,
  18. David A. Buell,
  19. Tim Burger,
  20. Brian Burkett,
  21. Nicholas Bushnell,
  22. Juan Campero,
  23. Ben Chiaro,
  24. Roberto Collins,
  25. Alexander L. Crook,
  26. Ben Curtin,
  27. Sean Demura,
  28. Andrew Dunsworth,
  29. Catherine Erickson,
  30. Reza Fatemi,
  31. Vinicius S. Ferreira,
  32. Leslie Flores-Burgos,
  33. Ebrahim Forati,
  34. Brooks Foxen,
  35. Gonzalo Garcia,
  36. William Giang,
  37. Marissa Giustina,
  38. Raja Gosula,
  39. Alejandro Grajales Dau,
  40. Michael C. Hamilton,
  41. Sean D. Harrington,
  42. Paula Heu,
  43. Jeremy Hilton,
  44. Markus R. Hoffmann,
  45. Sabrina Hong,
  46. Trent Huang,
  47. Ashley Huff,
  48. Justin Iveland,
  49. Evan Jeffrey,
  50. Julian Kelly,
  51. Seon Kim,
  52. Paul V. Klimov,
  53. Fedor Kostritsa,
  54. John Mark Kreikebaum,
  55. David Landhuis,
  56. Pavel Laptev,
  57. Lily Laws,
  58. Kenny Lee,
  59. Brian J. Lester,
  60. Alexander T. Lill,
  61. Wayne Liu,
  62. Aditya Locharla,
  63. Erik Lucero,
  64. Steven Martin,
  65. Matt McEwen,
  66. Anthony Megrant,
  67. Xiao Mi,
  68. Kevin C. Miao,
  69. Shirin Montazeri,
  70. Alexis Morvan,
  71. Matthew Neeley,
  72. Charles Neill,
  73. Ani Nersisyan,
  74. Jiun How Ng,
  75. Anthony Nguyen,
  76. Murray Nguyen,
  77. Rebecca Potter,
  78. Chris Quintana,
  79. Charles Rocque,
  80. Pedram Roushan,
  81. Kannan Sankaragomathi,
  82. Kevin J. Satzinger,
  83. Christopher Schuster,
  84. Michael J. Shearn,
  85. Aaron Shorter,
  86. Vladimir Shvarts,
  87. Jindra Skruzny,
  88. W. Clarke Smith,
  89. George Sterling,
  90. Marco Szalay,
  91. Douglas Thor,
  92. Alfredo Torres,
  93. Bryan W. K. Woo,
  94. Z. Jamie Yao,
  95. Ping Yeh,
  96. Juhwan Yoo,
  97. Grayson Young,
  98. Ningfeng Zhu,
  99. Nicholas Zobrist,
  100. and Daniel Sank
Superconducting qubits typically use a dispersive readout scheme, where a resonator is coupled to a qubit such that its frequency is qubit-state dependent. Measurement is performed

Readout of a quantum processor with high dynamic range Josephson parametric amplifiers

  1. T. C. White,
  2. Alex Opremcak,
  3. George Sterling,
  4. Alexander Korotkov,
  5. Daniel Sank,
  6. Rajeev Acharya,
  7. Markus Ansmann,
  8. Frank Arute,
  9. Kunal Arya,
  10. Joseph C Bardin,
  11. Andreas Bengtsson,
  12. Alexandre Bourassa,
  13. Jenna Bovaird,
  14. Leon Brill,
  15. Bob B. Buckley,
  16. David A. Buell,
  17. Tim Burger,
  18. Brian Burkett,
  19. Nicholas Bushnell,
  20. Zijun Chen,
  21. Ben Chiaro,
  22. Josh Cogan,
  23. Roberto Collins,
  24. Alexander L. Crook,
  25. Ben Curtin,
  26. Sean Demura,
  27. Andrew Dunsworth,
  28. Catherine Erickson,
  29. Reza Fatemi,
  30. Leslie Flores-Burgos,
  31. Ebrahim Forati,
  32. Brooks Foxen,
  33. William Giang,
  34. Marissa Giustina,
  35. Alejandro Grajales Dau,
  36. Michael C. Hamilton,
  37. Sean D. Harrington,
  38. Jeremy Hilton,
  39. Markus Hoffmann,
  40. Sabrina Hong,
  41. Trent Huang,
  42. Ashley Huff,
  43. Justin Iveland,
  44. Evan Jeffrey,
  45. Mária Kieferová,
  46. Seon Kim,
  47. Paul V. Klimov,
  48. Fedor Kostritsa,
  49. John Mark Kreikebaum,
  50. David Landhuis,
  51. Pavel Laptev,
  52. Lily Laws,
  53. Kenny Lee,
  54. Brian J. Lester,
  55. Alexander Lill,
  56. Wayne Liu,
  57. Aditya Locharla,
  58. Erik Lucero,
  59. Trevor McCourt,
  60. Matt McEwen,
  61. Xiao Mi,
  62. Kevin C. Miao,
  63. Shirin Montazeri,
  64. Alexis Morvan,
  65. Matthew Neeley,
  66. Charles Neill,
  67. Ani Nersisyan,
  68. Jiun How Ng,
  69. Anthony Nguyen,
  70. Murray Nguyen,
  71. Rebecca Potter,
  72. Chris Quintana,
  73. Pedram Roushan,
  74. Kannan Sankaragomathi,
  75. Kevin J. Satzinger,
  76. Christopher Schuster,
  77. Michael J. Shearn,
  78. Aaron Shorter,
  79. Vladimir Shvarts,
  80. Jindra Skruzny,
  81. W. Clarke Smith,
  82. Marco Szalay,
  83. Alfredo Torres,
  84. Bryan Woo,
  85. Z. Jamie Yao,
  86. Ping Yeh,
  87. Juhwan Yoo,
  88. Grayson Young,
  89. Ningfeng Zhu,
  90. Nicholas Zobrist,
  91. Yu Chen,
  92. Anthony Megrant,
  93. Julian Kelly,
  94. and Ofer Naaman
We demonstrate a high dynamic range Josephson parametric amplifier (JPA) in which the active nonlinear element is implemented using an array of rf-SQUIDs. The device is matched to the

Resolving catastrophic error bursts from cosmic rays in large arrays of superconducting qubits

  1. Matt McEwen,
  2. Lara Faoro,
  3. Kunal Arya,
  4. Andrew Dunsworth,
  5. Trent Huang,
  6. Seon Kim,
  7. Brian Burkett,
  8. Austin Fowler,
  9. Frank Arute,
  10. Joseph C Bardin,
  11. Andreas Bengtsson,
  12. Alexander Bilmes,
  13. Bob B. Buckley,
  14. Nicholas Bushnell,
  15. Zijun Chen,
  16. Roberto Collins,
  17. Sean Demura,
  18. Alan R. Derk,
  19. Catherine Erickson,
  20. Marissa Giustina,
  21. Sean D. Harrington,
  22. Sabrina Hong,
  23. Evan Jeffrey,
  24. Julian Kelly,
  25. Paul V. Klimov,
  26. Fedor Kostritsa,
  27. Pavel Laptev,
  28. Aditya Locharla,
  29. Xiao Mi,
  30. Kevin C. Miao,
  31. Shirin Montazeri,
  32. Josh Mutus,
  33. Ofer Naaman,
  34. Matthew Neeley,
  35. Charles Neill,
  36. Alex Opremcak,
  37. Chris Quintana,
  38. Nicholas Redd,
  39. Pedram Roushan,
  40. Daniel Sank,
  41. Kevin J. Satzinger,
  42. Vladimir Shvarts,
  43. Theodore White,
  44. Z. Jamie Yao,
  45. Ping Yeh,
  46. Juhwan Yoo,
  47. Yu Chen,
  48. Vadim Smelyanskiy,
  49. John M. Martinis,
  50. Hartmut Neven,
  51. Anthony Megrant,
  52. Lev Ioffe,
  53. and Rami Barends
Scalable quantum computing can become a reality with error correction, provided coherent qubits can be constructed in large arrays. The key premise is that physical errors can remain

Learning Non-Markovian Quantum Noise from Moiré-Enhanced Swap Spectroscopy with Deep Evolutionary Algorithm

  1. Murphy Yuezhen Niu,
  2. Vadim Smelyanskyi,
  3. Paul Klimov,
  4. Sergio Boixo,
  5. Rami Barends,
  6. Julian Kelly,
  7. Yu Chen,
  8. Kunal Arya,
  9. Brian Burkett,
  10. Dave Bacon,
  11. Zijun Chen,
  12. Ben Chiaro,
  13. Roberto Collins,
  14. Andrew Dunsworth,
  15. Brooks Foxen,
  16. Austin Fowler,
  17. Craig Gidney,
  18. Marissa Giustina,
  19. Rob Graff,
  20. Trent Huang,
  21. Evan Jeffrey,
  22. David Landhuis,
  23. Erik Lucero,
  24. Anthony Megrant,
  25. Josh Mutus,
  26. Xiao Mi,
  27. Ofer Naaman,
  28. Matthew Neeley,
  29. Charles Neill,
  30. Chris Quintana,
  31. Pedram Roushan,
  32. John M. Martinis,
  33. and Hartmut Neven
Two-level-system (TLS) defects in amorphous dielectrics are a major source of noise and decoherence in solid-state qubits. Gate-dependent non-Markovian errors caused by TLS-qubit coupling

A 28nm Bulk-CMOS 4-to-8GHz <2mW Cryogenic Pulse Modulator for Scalable Quantum Computing

  1. Joseph C Bardin,
  2. Evan Jeffrey,
  3. Erik Lucero,
  4. Trent Huang,
  5. Ofer Naaman,
  6. Rami Barends,
  7. Ted White,
  8. Marissa Giustina,
  9. Daniel Sank,
  10. Pedram Roushan,
  11. Kunal Arya,
  12. Benjamin Chiaro,
  13. Julian Kelly,
  14. Jimmy Chen,
  15. Brian Burkett,
  16. Yu Chen,
  17. Andrew Dunsworth,
  18. Austin Fowler,
  19. Brooks Foxen,
  20. Craig Gidney,
  21. Rob Graff,
  22. Paul Klimov,
  23. Josh Mutus,
  24. Matthew McEwen,
  25. Anthony Megrant,
  26. Matthew Neeley,
  27. Charles Neill,
  28. Chris Quintana,
  29. Amit Vainsencher,
  30. Hartmut Neven,
  31. and John Martinis
Future quantum computing systems will require cryogenic integrated circuits to control and measure millions of qubits. In this paper, we report the design and characterization of a

Strong environmental coupling in a Josephson parametric amplifier

  1. Josh Mutus,
  2. Ted White,
  3. Rami Barends,
  4. Yu Chen,
  5. Zijun Chen,
  6. Ben Chiaro,
  7. Andrew Dunsworth,
  8. Evan Jeffrey,
  9. Julian Kelly,
  10. Anthony Megrant,
  11. Charles Neill,
  12. Peter O'Malley,
  13. Pedram Roushan,
  14. Daniel Sank,
  15. Amit Vainsencher,
  16. James Wenner,
  17. Kyle Sundqvist,
  18. Andrew Cleland,
  19. and John Martinis
We present a lumped-element Josephson parametric amplifier designed to operate with strong coupling to the environment. In this regime, we observe broadband frequency dependent amplification

Fast Scalable State Measurement with Superconducting Qubits

  1. Daniel Sank,
  2. Evan Jeffrey,
  3. J. Y. Mutus,
  4. T. C. White,
  5. J. Kelly,
  6. R. Barends,
  7. Y. Chen,
  8. Z. Chen,
  9. B. Chiaro,
  10. A. Dunsworth,
  11. A. Megrant,
  12. P. J. J. O'Malley,
  13. C. Neill,
  14. P. Roushan,
  15. A. Vainsencher,
  16. J. Wenner,
  17. A. N. Cleland,
  18. and J.M. Martinis
Progress in superconducting qubit experiments with greater numbers of qubits or advanced techniques such as feedback requires faster and more accurate state measurement. We have designed

Fabrication and Characterization of Aluminum Airbridges for Superconducting Microwave Circuits

  1. Zijun Chen,
  2. Anthony Megrant,
  3. Julian Kelly,
  4. Rami Barends,
  5. Joerg Bochmann,
  6. Yu Chen,
  7. Ben Chiaro,
  8. Andrew Dunsworth,
  9. Evan Jeffrey,
  10. Joshua Mutus,
  11. Peter O'Malley,
  12. Charles Neill,
  13. Pedram Roushan,
  14. Daniel Sank,
  15. Amit Vainsencher,
  16. James Wenner,
  17. Theodore White,
  18. Andrew Cleland,
  19. and John Martinis
Superconducting microwave circuits based on coplanar waveguides (CPW) are susceptible to parasitic slotline modes which can lead to loss and decoherence. We motivate the use of superconducting