Theoretical study of reflection spectroscopy for superconducting quantum parametrons

  1. S. Masuda,
  2. A. Yamaguchi,
  3. T. Yamaji,
  4. T. Yamamoto,
  5. T. Ishikawa,
  6. Y. Matsuzaki,
  7. and S. Kawabata
Superconducting parametrons in the single-photon Kerr regime, also called KPOs, have been attracting increasing attention in terms of their applications to quantum annealing and universal
quantum computation. It is of practical importance to obtain information of superconducting parametrons operating under an oscillating pump field. Spectroscopy can provide information of a superconducting parametron under examination, such as energy level structure and occupation of energy levels, and also useful information for calibration of the pump field. We theoretically study the reflection spectroscopy of superconducting parametrons, and develop a method to obtain the reflection coefficient. We present formulae of the reflection coefficient, the nominal external and the internal decay rates, and examine the obtained spectra.

On-chip quantum feedback control of a superconducting qubit

  1. K. Kakuyanagi,
  2. A. Kemp,
  3. T. Baba,
  4. Y. Matsuzaki,
  5. H. Nakano,
  6. K. Semba,
  7. and S. Saito
Quantum feedback is a technique for measuring a qubit and applying appropriate feedback depending on the measurement results. Here, we propose a new on-chip quantum feedback method
where the measurement-result information is not taken from the chip to the outside of a dilution refrigerator. This can be done by using a selective qubit-energy shift induced by measurement apparatus. We demonstrate on-chip quantum feedback and succeed in the rapid initialization of a qubit by flipping the qubit state only when we detect the ground state of the qubit. The feedback loop of our quantum feedback method closed on a chip, and so the operating time needed to control a qubit is of the order of 10 ns. This operating time is shorter than with the convectional off-chip feedback method. Our on-chip quantum feedback technique opens many possibilities such as an application to quantum information processing and providing an understanding of the foundation of thermodynamics for quantum systems.

Analysis of the spectroscopy of a hybrid system composed of a superconducting flux qubit and diamond NV centers

  1. H. Cai,
  2. Y. Matsuzaki,
  3. K. Kakuyanagi,
  4. H. Toida,
  5. X. Zhu,
  6. N. Mizuochi,
  7. K. Nemoto,
  8. K. Semba,
  9. W. J. Munro,
  10. S. Saito,
  11. and H. Yamaguchi
A hybrid system that combines the advantages of a superconducting flux qubit and an electron spin ensemble in diamond is one of the promising devices to realize quantum information
processing. Exploring the properties of the superconductor diamond system is essential for the efficient use of this device. When we perform spectroscopy of this system, significant power broadening is observed. However, previous models to describe this system are known to be applicable only when the power broadening is negligible. Here, we construct a new approach to analyze this system with strong driving, and succeed to reproduce the spectrum with the power broadening. Our results provide an efficient way to analyze this hybrid system.