Quantum information processing using 3D multimode circuit QED

ORAL

Abstract

Multimode superconducting microwave cavities provide a hardware efficient means of engineering a large, high-coherence Hilbert space suitable for quantum information processing. When coupled to a superconducting transmon circuit, they can be used to construct random access quantum processors in which logic gates can be performed between arbitrary pairs of cavity modes via sideband transitions with the transmon [1]. We present our progress toward realizing such a processor using a seamless rectangular 3D multimode cavity - the quantum flute, with a tailored mode dispersion and decay times around a millisecond for tens of cavity modes. To eliminate coherent errors arising from multimode state dependent Stark shifts of the transmon, we introduce an intermediate single-mode 'manipulate' cavity with a tunable coupling to the multimode cavity.

[1] Naik, R. K., et al. "Random access quantum information processors using multimode circuit quantum electrodynamics." Nature communications 8, 1904 (2017).

Presenters

  • Srivatsan Chakram

    The University of Chicago, University of Chicago

Authors

  • Srivatsan Chakram

    The University of Chicago, University of Chicago

  • Ravi Naik

    Physics, Univ of California – Berkeley, University of Chicago

  • Akash Dixit

    University of Chicago

  • Yao Lu

    University of Chicago

  • Alexander Anferov

    University of Chicago

  • Nelson Leung

    University of Chicago

  • Andrew Oriani

    University of Chicago

  • David Schuster

    University of Chicago, The University of Chicago, Physics, University of Chicago, Department of Physics, University of Chicago