Upper speed limit on parametric gates in Josephson junction-based circuits (part II)

ORAL

Abstract

Parametric driving of a qubit coupler presents a convenient way to control systems of superconducting qubits. This setup aims to realize fast and efficient single- or multi-qubit gates, where gate speeds ideally increase with drive strength. However, experiments reveal that an increase in drive strength eventually leads to a sudden proliferation of excitations in the coupler. This generally limits the maximum speed of parametric gates. To study this drive-induced breakdown, we consider a strongly and off-resonantly driven transmon. Using full numerical simulations of the system's dynamics, we observe a crossover region in drive strength beyond which the transmon occupies highly-excited states. We show how to locate the onset of breakdown, which agrees well with the experimental data. Moreover, we show that the sudden excitations can be understood using the tools previously developed to describe the breakdown of dispersive readout [Phys. Rev. X 14, 041023 (2024)]. Our work opens pathways to the optimization of qubit couplers for maximizing gate speeds.

*Work supported by the DOE via the C2QA collaboration and the Quantum System Accelerator, the ARO/LPS, the NSF GRFP, NSERC, the Canada First Research Excellence Fund, and the Ministère de l'Économie et de l'Innovation du Québec.

Presenters

  • Matthew Capocci

    • Northwestern University

Authors

  • Matthew Capocci

    • Northwestern University
  • Mingkang Xia

    • University of Pittsburgh
    • University of Pittsburgh, Yale University
  • Cristóbal Lledó

    • Université de Sherbrooke
  • Ian Mondragon-Shem

    • Northwestern University
  • Jacob J Repicky

    • Yale University
  • Benjamin d'Anjou

    • Université de Sherbrooke
    • Sherbrooke
  • Ryan Kaufman

    • University of Pittsburgh
  • Boris Mesits

    • University of Pittsburgh, Yale University
    • University of Pittsburgh
  • David Pekker

    • University of Pittsburgh
  • Alexandre Blais

    • Université de Sherbrooke
  • Michael Hatridge

    • Yale University
    • University of Pittsburgh
  • Jens Koch

    • Northwestern University