Fast, low-photon-number readout using the arm qubit: Part II

ORAL

Abstract

Fast and high-fidelity qubit state measurement is essential for quantum information processing and error correction. In superconducting qubits, state-of-the-art readout typically relies on a dispersive interaction between the qubit and a readout resonator, but further speedups are constrained by limits on dispersive coupling strength and increased leakage at large photon numbers. We present a new readout approach based on the arm qubit architecture, which comprises a long-lived "data" mode coupled to a tunable "arm" mode [1]. The arm mode enables strong nonlinear coupling to a readout resonator, with numerical simulations predicting state-assignment fidelity of 99.99% in 27 ns with ~3.5 photons, assuming a quantum efficiency of 0.5. This design also eliminates the need for a Purcell filter and suppresses shot-noise dephasing during idle time. We report progress toward an experimental implementation of fast readout using the arm qubit.

*This research was supported in part by the Army Research Office under award no. W911NF-23-1-045. J.B.K acknowledges support from the MIT CQE-LPS Doc Bedard Fellowship. The authors acknowledge the MIT Supercloud and Lincoln Laboratory Supercomputing center for providing high performance computing resources that have contributed to the research results reported within this work. This work was carried out in part through the use of MIT.nano's facilities.

Publication: [1] J. B. Kline, A. Yen, S. Chen, and K. P. O'Brien, "The Arm Qubit: A Superconducting Qubit Co-Designed for Coherence and Coupling," June 05, 2025, arXiv: arXiv:2506.05315.

Presenters

  • Alec Yen

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Alec Yen

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Jeremy B Kline

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Stanley Chen

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Kaidong Peng

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Andres Esteban Lombo

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Eric Q Bui

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Kevin P O'Brien

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology