Monitoring fast superconducting qubit dynamics using a neural network

  1. G. Koolstra,
  2. N. Stevenson,
  3. S. Barzili,
  4. L. Burns,
  5. K. Siva,
  6. S. Greenfield,
  7. W. Livingston,
  8. A. Hashim,
  9. R. K. Naik,
  10. J.M. Kreikebaum,
  11. K. P. O'Brien,
  12. D. I. Santiago,
  13. J. Dressel,
  14. and I. Siddiqi
Weak measurements of a superconducting qubit produce noisy voltage signals that are weakly correlated with the qubit state. To recover individual quantum trajectories from these noisy
signals, traditional methods require slow qubit dynamics and substantial prior information in the form of calibration experiments. Monitoring rapid qubit dynamics, e.g. during quantum gates, requires more complicated methods with increased demand for prior information. Here, we experimentally demonstrate an alternative method for accurately tracking rapidly driven superconducting qubit trajectories that uses a Long-Short Term Memory (LSTM) artificial neural network with minimal prior information. Despite few training assumptions, the LSTM produces trajectories that include qubit-readout resonator correlations due to a finite detection bandwidth. In addition to revealing rotated measurement eigenstates and a reduced measurement rate in agreement with theory for a fixed drive, the trained LSTM also correctly reconstructs evolution for an unknown drive with rapid modulation. Our work enables new applications of weak measurements with faster or initially unknown qubit dynamics, such as the diagnosis of coherent errors in quantum gates.

Qutrit randomized benchmarking

  1. A. Morvan,
  2. V. V. Ramasesh,
  3. M. S. Blok,
  4. J.M. Kreikebaum,
  5. K. O'Brien,
  6. L. Chen,
  7. B. K. Mitchell,
  8. R. K. Naik,
  9. D. I. Santiago,
  10. and I. Siddiqi
Ternary quantum processors offer significant computational advantages over conventional qubit technologies, leveraging the encoding and processing of quantum information in qutrits
(three-level systems). To evaluate and compare the performance of such emerging quantum hardware it is essential to have robust benchmarking methods suitable for a higher-dimensional Hilbert space. We demonstrate extensions of industry standard Randomized Benchmarking (RB) protocols, developed and used extensively for qubits, suitable for ternary quantum logic. Using a superconducting five-qutrit processor, we find a single-qutrit gate infidelity as low as 2.38×10−3. Through interleaved RB, we find that this qutrit gate error is largely limited by the native (qubit-like) gate fidelity, and employ simultaneous RB to fully characterize cross-talk errors. Finally, we apply cycle benchmarking to a two-qutrit CSUM gate and obtain a two-qutrit process fidelity of 0.82. Our results demonstrate a RB-based tool to characterize the obtain overall performance of a qutrit processor, and a general approach to diagnose control errors in future qudit hardware.

Random access quantum information processors

  1. R. K. Naik,
  2. N. Leung,
  3. S. Chakram,
  4. P. Groszkowski,
  5. Y. Lu,
  6. N. Earnest,
  7. D. C. McKay,
  8. Jens Koch,
  9. and D.I. Schuster
Qubit connectivity is an important property of a quantum processor, with an ideal processor having random access — the ability of arbitrary qubit pairs to interact directly. Here,
we implement a random access superconducting quantum information processor, demonstrating universal operations on a nine-bit quantum memory, with a single transmon serving as the central processor. The quantum memory uses the eigenmodes of a linear array of coupled superconducting resonators. The memory bits are superpositions of vacuum and single-photon states, controlled by a single superconducting transmon coupled to the edge of the array. We selectively stimulate single-photon vacuum Rabi oscillations between the transmon and individual eigenmodes through parametric flux modulation of the transmon frequency, producing sidebands resonant with the modes. Utilizing these oscillations for state transfer, we perform a universal set of single- and two-qubit gates between arbitrary pairs of modes, using only the charge and flux bias of the transmon. Further, we prepare multimode entangled Bell and GHZ states of arbitrary modes. The fast and flexible control, achieved with efficient use of cryogenic resources and control electronics, in a scalable architecture compatible with state-of-the-art quantum memories is promising for quantum computation and simulation.