Enhancing Dispersive Readout of Superconducting Qubits Through Dynamic Control of the Dispersive Shift: Experiment and Theory

ORAL

Abstract

The performance of a wide range of quantum computing algorithms and protocols depends critically on the fidelity and speed of the employed qubit readout. Examples include gate sequences benefiting from mid-circuit, real-time, measurement-based feedback, such as qubit initialization, entanglement generation, teleportation, and perhaps most importantly, quantum error correction. A prominent and widely-used readout approach is based on the dispersive interaction of a superconducting qubit strongly coupled to a large-bandwidth readout resonator, frequently combined with a dedicated or shared Purcell filter protecting qubits from decay. By dynamically reducing the qubit-resonator detuning and thus increasing the dispersive shift, we demonstrate a beyond-state-of-the-art two-state-readout error of only 0.25% in 100 ns integration time. Maintaining low readout-drive strength, we nearly quadruple the signal-to-noise ratio of the readout by doubling the readout mode linewidth, which we quantify by considering the hybridization of the readout-resonator and its dedicated Purcell-filter. We find excellent agreement between our experimental data and our theoretical model. The presented results are expected to further boost the performance of new and existing algorithms and protocols critically depending on high-fidelity, fast, mid-circuit measurements.

* The team in Zurich acknowledges financial support by the ODNI, (IARPA, through the U.S Army Research Office grant W911NF-16-1-0071, by the EU Flagship on Quantum Technology H2020-FETFLAG-2018-03 project 820363 OpenSuperQ, by SNFS NCCR QSIT (grant number 51NF40-185902), by the SNSF R'Equip grant 206021-170731, by H2020-FETOPEN project 828826 Quromorphic and by ETH Zurich. S.K acknowledges financial support from Fondation Jean-Jacques et Félicia Lopez-Loreta and the ETH Zurich Foundation. The team in Sherbrooke acknowledges the financial support by NSERC, the CFREF, and the Ministère de l'Economie et de l'Innovation du Québec. Support is also acknowledged from the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, National Quantum Information Science Research Centers, Quantum Systems Accelerator.

Publication: F. Swiadek et al, arXiv:2307.07765 (2023)

Presenters

  • François Swiadek

    ETH Zurich

Authors

  • François Swiadek

    ETH Zurich

  • Ross Shillito

    Universite de Sherbrooke

  • Paul Magnard

    ETH Zurich

  • Ants Remm

    ETH Zurich

  • Christoph Hellings

    ETH Zurich

  • Nathan Lacroix

    ETH Zurich

  • Quentin Ficheux

    Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Grenoble INP, Institut Néel, 38000 Grenoble, France, ETH Zurich, Institut Neel, CNRS

  • Dante Colao Zanuz

    ETH Zurich

  • Graham J Norris

    ETH Zurich

  • Alexandre Blais

    Universite de Sherbrooke

  • Sebastian Krinner

    ETH Zurich

  • Andreas Wallraff

    ETH Zurich