Increased connectivity and fast gates for superconducting qubits with a common galvanic SQUID coupler
ORAL
Abstract
Most popular superconducting qubit system architectures employ pairwise nearest-neighbor (either fixed or tunable) couplings between qubits and individualized readout resonators. In these systems the localized nearest-neighbor connectivity can create overhead for algorithm circuit decomposition requiring numerous SWAP operations. However, there are feasible alternative architectures that increase qubit connectivity and multiplex control and readout resources, both benefitting scalability considerations. With appropriate parameter choice and frequency allocation, groups of qubits with all-to-all connectivity can be achieved despite the challenge of the quadratic increase in the number of pairwise interactions with increasing qubit count. Here, we present an experimental system of three transmons galvanically coupled with a shared tunable SQUID element. This system combines all-to-all connectivity with high on/off coupling ratios and fast parametrically driven interactions for both 2-qubit and 3-qubit gates.
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Presenters
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Zachary L Parrott
- University of Colorado, Boulder
- University of Colorado Boulder, National Institute of Standards and Technology
- University of Colorado Boulder, National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder
- National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder, University of Colorado Boulder
- University of Colorado Boulder