High-sensitivity AC-charge detection with a MHz-frequency fluxonium qubit

  1. B.-L. Najera-Santos,
  2. R. Rousseau,
  3. K. Gerashchenko,
  4. H. Patange,
  5. A. Riva,
  6. M. Villiers,
  7. T. Briant,
  8. P.-F. Cohadon,
  9. A. Heidmann,
  10. J. Palomo,
  11. M. Rosticher,
  12. H. le Sueur,
  13. A. Sarlette,
  14. W. C. Smith,
  15. Z. Leghtas,
  16. E. Flurin,
  17. T. Jacqmin,
  18. and S. Deléglise
Owing to their strong dipole moment and long coherence times, superconducting qubits have demonstrated remarkable success in hybrid quantum circuits. However, most qubit architectures
are limited to the GHz frequency range, severely constraining the class of systems they can interact with. The fluxonium qubit, on the other hand, can be biased to very low frequency while being manipulated and read out with standard microwave techniques. Here, we design and operate a heavy fluxonium with an unprecedentedly low transition frequency of 1.8 MHz. We demonstrate resolved sideband cooling of the „hot“ qubit transition with a final ground state population of 97.7 %, corresponding to an effective temperature of 23 μK. We further demonstrate coherent manipulation with coherence times T1=34 μs, T∗2=39 μs, and single-shot readout of the qubit state. Importantly, by directly addressing the qubit transition with a capacitively coupled waveguide, we showcase its high sensitivity to a radio-frequency field. Through cyclic qubit preparation and interrogation, we transform this low-frequency fluxonium qubit into a frequency-resolved charge sensor. This method results in a charge sensitivity of 33 μe/Hz‾‾‾√, or an energy sensitivity (in joules per hertz) of 2.8 ℏ. This method rivals state-of-the-art transport-based devices, while maintaining inherent insensitivity to DC charge noise. The high charge sensitivity combined with large capacitive shunt unlocks new avenues for exploring quantum phenomena in the 1−10 MHz range, such as the strong-coupling regime with a resonant macroscopic mechanical resonator.

Dynamically enhancing qubit-oscillator interactions with anti-squeezing

  1. M. Villiers,
  2. W. C. Smith,
  3. A. Petrescu,
  4. A. Borgognoni,
  5. M. Delbecq,
  6. A. Sarlette,
  7. M. Mirrahimi,
  8. P. Campagne-Ibarcq,
  9. T. Kontos,
  10. and Z. Leghtas
The interaction strength of an oscillator to a qubit grows with the oscillator’s vacuum field fluctuations. The well known degenerate parametric oscillator has revived interest
in the regime of strongly detuned squeezing, where its eigenstates are squeezed Fock states. Owing to these amplified field fluctuations, it was recently proposed that squeezing this oscillator would dynamically boost its coupling to a qubit. In a superconducting circuit experiment, we observe a two-fold increase in the dispersive interaction between a qubit and an oscillator at 5.5 dB of squeezing, demonstrating in-situ dynamical control of qubit-oscillator interactions. This work initiates the experimental coupling of oscillators of squeezed photons to qubits, and cautiously motivates their dissemination in experimental platforms seeking enhanced interactions.

One hundred second bit-flip time in a two-photon dissipative oscillator

  1. C. Berdou,
  2. A. Murani,
  3. U. Reglade,
  4. W. C. Smith,
  5. M. Villiers,
  6. J. Palomo,
  7. M. Rosticher,
  8. A. Denis,
  9. P. Morfin,
  10. M. Delbecq,
  11. T. Kontos,
  12. N. Pankratova,
  13. F. Rautschke,
  14. T. Peronnin,
  15. L.-A. Sellem,
  16. P. Rouchon,
  17. A. Sarlette,
  18. M. Mirrahimi,
  19. P. Campagne-Ibarcq,
  20. S. Jezouin,
  21. R. Lescanne,
  22. and Z. Leghtas
Current implementations of quantum bits (qubits) continue to undergo too many errors to be scaled into useful quantum machines. An emerging strategy is to encode quantum information
in the two meta-stable pointer states of an oscillator exchanging pairs of photons with its environment, a mechanism shown to provide stability without inducing decoherence. Adding photons in these states increases their separation, and macroscopic bit-flip times are expected even for a handful of photons, a range suitable to implement a qubit. However, previous experimental realizations have saturated in the millisecond range. In this work, we aim for the maximum bit-flip time we could achieve in a two-photon dissipative oscillator. To this end, we design a Josephson circuit in a regime that circumvents all suspected dynamical instabilities, and employ a minimally invasive fluorescence detection tool, at the cost of a two-photon exchange rate dominated by single-photon loss. We attain bit-flip times of the order of 100 seconds for states pinned by two-photon dissipation and containing about 40 photons. This experiment lays a solid foundation from which the two-photon exchange rate can be gradually increased, thus gaining access to the preparation and measurement of quantum superposition states, and pursuing the route towards a logical qubit with built-in bit-flip protection.

Magnifying quantum phase fluctuations with Cooper-pair pairing

  1. W. C. Smith,
  2. M. Villiers,
  3. A. Marquet,
  4. J. Palomo,
  5. M. R. Delbecq,
  6. T. Kontos,
  7. P. Campagne-Ibarcq,
  8. B. Douçot,
  9. and Z. Leghtas
Remarkably, complex assemblies of superconducting wires, electrodes, and Josephson junctions are compactly described by a handful of collective phase degrees of freedom that behave
like quantum particles in a potential. The inductive wires contribute a parabolic confinement, while the tunnel junctions add a cosinusoidal corrugation. Usually, the ground state wavefunction is localized within a single potential well — that is, quantum phase fluctuations are small — although entering the regime of delocalization holds promise for metrology and qubit protection. A direct route is to loosen the inductive confinement and let the ground state phase spread over multiple Josephson periods, but this requires a circuit impedance vastly exceeding the resistance quantum and constitutes an ongoing experimental challenge. Here we take a complementary approach and fabricate a generalized Josephson element that can be tuned in situ between one- and two-Cooper-pair tunneling, doubling the frequency of the corrugation and thereby magnifying the number of wells probed by the ground state. We measure a tenfold suppression of flux sensitivity of the first transition energy, implying a twofold increase in the vacuum phase fluctuations.