Efficient Generation of Multi-partite Entanglement between Non-local Superconducting Qubits using Classical Feedback

  1. Akel Hashim,
  2. Ming Yuan,
  3. Pranav Gokhale,
  4. Larry Chen,
  5. Christian Jünger,
  6. Neelay Fruitwala,
  7. Yilun Xu,
  8. Gang Huang,
  9. Liang Jiang,
  10. and Irfan Siddiqi
Quantum entanglement is one of the primary features which distinguishes quantum computers from classical computers. In gate-based quantum computing, the creation of entangled states
or the distribution of entanglement across a quantum processor often requires circuit depths which grow with the number of entangled qubits. However, in teleportation-based quantum computing, one can deterministically generate entangled states with a circuit depth that is constant in the number of qubits, provided that one has access to an entangled resource state, the ability to perform mid-circuit measurements, and can rapidly transmit classical information. In this work, aided by fast classical FPGA-based control hardware with a feedback latency of only 150 ns, we explore the utility of teleportation-based protocols for generating non-local, multi-partite entanglement between superconducting qubits. First, we demonstrate well-known protocols for generating Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) states and non-local CNOT gates in constant depth. Next, we utilize both protocols for implementing an unbounded fan-out (i.e., controlled-NOT-NOT) gate in constant depth between three non-local qubits. Finally, we demonstrate deterministic state teleportation and entanglement swapping between qubits on opposite side of our quantum processor.

Non-classical microwave-optical photon pair generation with a chip-scale transducer

  1. Srujan Meesala,
  2. Steven Wood,
  3. David Lake,
  4. Piero Chiappina,
  5. Changchun Zhong,
  6. Andrew D. Beyer,
  7. Matthew D. Shaw,
  8. Liang Jiang,
  9. and Oskar Painter
Modern computing and communication technologies such as supercomputers and the internet are based on optically connected networks of microwave frequency information processors. In recent
years, an analogous architecture has emerged for quantum networks with optically distributed entanglement between remote superconducting quantum processors, a leading platform for quantum computing. Here we report an important milestone towards such networks by observing non-classical correlations between photons in an optical link and a superconducting electrical circuit. We generate such states of light through a spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC) process in a chip-scale piezo-optomechanical transducer. The non-classical nature of the emitted light is verified by observing anti-bunching in the microwave state conditioned on detection of an optical photon. Such a transducer can be readily connected to a superconducting quantum processor, and serve as a key building block for optical quantum networks of microwave frequency qubits.

Conditional not displacement: fast multi-oscillator control with a single qubit

  1. Asaf A. Diringer,
  2. Eliya Blumenthal,
  3. Avishay Grinberg,
  4. Liang Jiang,
  5. and Shay Hacohen-Gourgy
Bosonic encoding is an approach for quantum information processing, promising lower hardware overhead by encoding in the many levels of a harmonic oscillator. Scaling to multiple modes
requires them to be decoupled for independent control, yet strongly coupled for fast interaction. How to perform fast and efficient universal control on multiple modes remains an open problem. We develop a control method that enables fast multi-mode generation and control of bosonic qubits which are weakly coupled to a single ancilla qubit. The weak coupling allows for excellent independent control, despite the weak ancilla coupling our method allows for fast control. We demonstrate our control by using a superconducting transmon qubit coupled to a multi-mode superconducting cavity. We create both entangled and separate cat-states in different modes of a multi-mode cavity, showing the individual and coupled control of the modes. We show that the operation time is not limited by the inverse of the dispersive coupling rate, which is the typical timescale, and we exceed it in practice by almost 2 orders of magnitude. Our scheme allows for multi-mode bosonic codes as well as more efficient scaling of hardware.

Quantum control of bosonic modes with superconducting circuits

  1. Wen-Long Ma,
  2. Shruti Puri,
  3. Robert J. Schoelkopf,
  4. Michel H. Devoret,
  5. S. M. Girvin,
  6. and Liang Jiang
Bosonic modes have wide applications in various quantum technologies, such as optical photons for quantum communication, magnons in spin ensembles for quantum information storage and
mechanical modes for reversible microwave-to-optical quantum transduction. There is emerging interest in utilizing bosonic modes for quantum information processing, with circuit quantum electrodynamics (circuit QED) as one of the leading architectures. Quantum information can be encoded into subspaces of a bosonic superconducting cavity mode with long coherence time. However, standard Gaussian operations (e.g., beam splitting and two-mode squeezing) are insufficient for universal quantum computing. The major challenge is to introduce additional nonlinear control beyond Gaussian operations without adding significant bosonic loss or decoherence. Here we review recent advances in universal control of a single bosonic code with superconducting circuits, including unitary control, quantum feedback control, driven-dissipative control and holonomic dissipative control. Entangling different bosonic modes with various approaches is also discussed.

Building a fault-tolerant quantum computer using concatenated cat codes

  1. Christopher Chamberland,
  2. Kyungjoo Noh,
  3. Patricio Arrangoiz-Arriola,
  4. Earl T. Campbell,
  5. Connor T. Hann,
  6. Joseph Iverson,
  7. Harald Putterman,
  8. Thomas C. Bohdanowicz,
  9. Steven T. Flammia,
  10. Andrew Keller,
  11. Gil Refael,
  12. John Preskill,
  13. Liang Jiang,
  14. Amir H. Safavi-Naeini,
  15. Oskar Painter,
  16. and Fernando G.S.L. Brandão
We present a comprehensive architectural analysis for a fault-tolerant quantum computer based on cat codes concatenated with outer quantum error-correcting codes. For the physical hardware,
we propose a system of acoustic resonators coupled to superconducting circuits with a two-dimensional layout. Using estimated near-term physical parameters for electro-acoustic systems, we perform a detailed error analysis of measurements and gates, including CNOT and Toffoli gates. Having built a realistic noise model, we numerically simulate quantum error correction when the outer code is either a repetition code or a thin rectangular surface code. Our next step toward universal fault-tolerant quantum computation is a protocol for fault-tolerant Toffoli magic state preparation that significantly improves upon the fidelity of physical Toffoli gates at very low qubit cost. To achieve even lower overheads, we devise a new magic-state distillation protocol for Toffoli states. Combining these results together, we obtain realistic full-resource estimates of the physical error rates and overheads needed to run useful fault-tolerant quantum algorithms. We find that with around 1,000 superconducting circuit components, one could construct a fault-tolerant quantum computer that can run circuits which are intractable for classical supercomputers. Hardware with 32,000 superconducting circuit components, in turn, could simulate the Hubbard model in a regime beyond the reach of classical computing.

Multimode photon blockade

  1. Srivatsan Chakram,
  2. Kevin He,
  3. Akash V. Dixit,
  4. Andrew E. Oriani,
  5. Ravi K. Naik,
  6. Nelson Leung,
  7. Hyeokshin Kwon,
  8. Wen-Long Ma,
  9. Liang Jiang,
  10. and David I. Schuster
Interactions are essential for the creation of correlated quantum many-body states. While two-body interactions underlie most natural phenomena, three- and four-body interactions are
important for the physics of nuclei [1], exotic few-body states in ultracold quantum gases [2], the fractional quantum Hall effect [3], quantum error correction [4], and holography [5, 6]. Recently, a number of artificial quantum systems have emerged as simulators for many-body physics, featuring the ability to engineer strong interactions. However, the interactions in these systems have largely been limited to the two-body paradigm, and require building up multi-body interactions by combining two-body forces. Here, we demonstrate a pure N-body interaction between microwave photons stored in an arbitrary number of electromagnetic modes of a multimode cavity. The system is dressed such that there is collectively no interaction until a target total photon number is reached across multiple distinct modes, at which point they interact strongly. The microwave cavity features 9 modes with photon lifetimes of ∼2 ms coupled to a superconducting transmon circuit, forming a multimode circuit QED system with single photon cooperativities of ∼109. We generate multimode interactions by using cavity photon number resolved drives on the transmon circuit to blockade any multiphoton state with a chosen total photon number distributed across the target modes. We harness the interaction for state preparation, preparing Fock states of increasing photon number via quantum optimal control pulses acting only on the cavity modes. We demonstrate multimode interactions by generating entanglement purely with uniform cavity drives and multimode photon blockade, and characterize the resulting two- and three-mode W states using a new protocol for multimode Wigner tomography.

Single-shot number-resolved detection of microwave photons with error mitigation

  1. Jacob C. Curtis,
  2. Connor T. Hann,
  3. Salvatore S. Elder,
  4. Christopher S. Wang,
  5. Luigi Frunzio,
  6. Liang Jiang,
  7. and Robert J. Schoelkopf
Single-photon detectors are ubiquitous and integral components of photonic quantum cryptography, communication, and computation. Many applications, however, require not only detecting
the presence of any photons, but distinguishing the number present with a single shot. Here, we implement a single-shot, high-fidelity photon number-resolving detector of up to 15 microwave photons in a cavity-qubit circuit QED platform. This detector functions by measuring a series of generalized parity operators which make up the bits in the binary decomposition of the photon number. Our protocol consists of successive, independent measurements of each bit by entangling the ancilla with the cavity, then reading out and resetting the ancilla. Photon loss and ancilla readout errors can flip one or more bits, causing nontrivial errors in the outcome, but these errors have a traceable form which can be captured in a simple hidden Markov model. Relying on the independence of each bit measurement, we mitigate biases in the measurement result, showing good agreement with the predictions of the model. The mitigation improves the average total variation distance error of Fock states from 13.5% to 1.3%. We also show that the mitigation is efficiently scalable to an M-mode system provided that the errors are independent and sufficiently small. Our work motivates the development of new algorithms that utilize single-shot, high-fidelity PNR detectors.

Photon-Number Dependent Hamiltonian Engineering for Cavities

  1. Chiao-Hsuan Wang,
  2. Kyungjoo Noh,
  3. José Lebreuilly,
  4. S. M. Girvin,
  5. and Liang Jiang
Cavity resonators are promising resources for quantum technology, while native nonlinear interactions for cavities are typically too weak to provide the level of quantum control required
to deliver complex targeted operations. Here we investigate a scheme to engineer a target Hamiltonian for photonic cavities using ancilla qubits. By off-resonantly driving dispersively coupled ancilla qubits, we develop an optimized approach to engineering an arbitrary photon-number dependent (PND) Hamiltonian for the cavities while minimizing the operation errors. The engineered Hamiltonian admits various applications including canceling unwanted cavity self-Kerr interactions, creating higher-order nonlinearities for quantum simulations, and designing quantum gates resilient to noise. Our scheme can be implemented with coupled microwave cavities and transmon qubits in superconducting circuit systems.

Efficient cavity control with SNAP gates

  1. Thomas Fösel,
  2. Stefan Krastanov,
  3. Florian Marquardt,
  4. and Liang Jiang
Microwave cavities coupled to superconducting qubits have been demonstrated to be a promising platform for quantum information processing. A major challenge in this setup is to realize
universal control over the cavity. A promising approach are selective number-dependent arbitrary phase (SNAP) gates combined with cavity displacements. It has been proven that this is a universal gate set, but a central question remained open so far: how can a given target operation be realized efficiently with a sequence of these operations. In this work, we present a practical scheme to address this problem. It involves a hierarchical strategy to insert new gates into a sequence, followed by a co-optimization of the control parameters, which generates short high-fidelity sequences. For a broad range of experimentally relevant applications, we find that they can be implemented with 3 to 4 SNAP gates, compared to up to 50 with previously known techniques.

Error-detected state transfer and entanglement in a superconducting quantum network

  1. Luke D Burkhart,
  2. James Teoh,
  3. Yaxing Zhang,
  4. Christopher J Axline,
  5. Luigi Frunzio,
  6. M.H. Devoret,
  7. Liang Jiang,
  8. S.M. Girvin,
  9. and R. J. Schoelkopf
Modular networks are a promising paradigm for increasingly complex quantum devices based on the ability to transfer qubits and generate entanglement between modules. These tasks require
a low-loss, high-speed intermodule link that enables extensible network connectivity. Satisfying these demands simultaneously remains an outstanding goal for long-range optical quantum networks as well as modular superconducting processors within a single cryostat. We demonstrate communication and entanglement in a superconducting network with a microwave-actuated beamsplitter transformation between two bosonic qubits, which are housed in separate modules and joined by a demountable coaxial bus resonator. We transfer a qubit in a multi-photon encoding and track photon loss events to improve the fidelity, making it as high as in a single-photon encoding. Furthermore, generating entanglement with two-photon interference and postselection against loss errors produces a Bell state with success probability 79% and fidelity 0.94, halving the error obtained with a single photon. These capabilities demonstrate several promising methods for faithful operations between modules, including novel possibilities for resource-efficient direct gates.