457 research outputs found
Parity switching and decoherence by quasiparticles in single-junction transmons
The transmon superconducting qubit is being intensely investigated as a
promising approach for the physical implementation of quantum information
processing, and high quality factors of order have been achieved both in
two- and three-dimensional architectures. These high quality factors enable
detailed investigations of decoherence mechanisms. An intrinsic decoherence
process originates from the coupling between the qubit degree of freedom and
the quasiparticles that tunnel across Josephson junctions. In a transmon,
tunneling of a single quasiparticle is associated with a change in parity. Here
we present the theory of the parity-switching rates in single-junction
transmons and compare it with recent measurements. We also show that parity
switching can have an important role in limiting the coherence time.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Collective modes in the fluxonium qubit
Superconducting qubit designs vary in complexity from single- and
few-junction systems, such as the transmon and flux qubits, to the
many-junction fluxonium. Here we consider the question of wether the many
degrees of freedom in the fluxonium circuit can limit the qubit coherence time.
Such a limitation is in principle possible, due to the interactions between the
low-energy, highly anharmonic qubit mode and the higher-energy, weakly
anharmonic collective modes. We show that so long as the coupling of the
collective modes with the external electromagnetic environment is sufficiently
weaker than the qubit-environment coupling, the qubit dephasing induced by the
collective modes does not significantly contribute to decoherence. Therefore,
the increased complexity of the fluxonium qubit does not constitute by itself a
major obstacle for its use in quantum computation architectures.Comment: 22 pages, 15 figure
Dissipation in a superconducting artificial atom due to a single non-equilibrium quasiparticle
We study a superconducting artificial atom which is represented by a single
Josephson junction or a Josephson junction chain, capacitively coupled to a
coherently driven transmission line, and which contains exactly one residual
quasiparticle (or up to one quasiparticle per island in a chain). We study the
dissipation in the atom induced by the quasiparticle tunneling, taking into
account the quasiparticle heating by the drive. We calculate the transmission
coefficient in the transmission line for drive frequencies near resonance and
show that, when the artificial atom spectrum is nearly harmonic, the intrinsic
quality factor of the resonance increases with the drive power. This
counterintuitive behavior is due to the energy dependence of the quasiparticle
density of states
Interaction corrections: temperature and parallel field dependencies of the Lorentz number in two-dimensional disordered metals
The electron-electron interaction corrections to the transport coefficients
are calculated for a two-dimensional disordered metal in a parallel magnetic
field via the quantum kinetic equation approach. For the thermal transport,
three regimes (diffusive, quasiballistic and truly ballistic) can be identified
as the temperature increases. For the diffusive and quasiballistic regimes, the
Lorentz number dependence on the temperature and on the magnetic field is
studied. The electron-electron interactions induce deviations from the
Wiedemann-Franz law, whose sign depend on the temperature: at low temperatures
the long-range part of the Coulomb interaction gives a positive correction,
while at higher temperature the inelastic collisions dominate the negative
correction. By applying a parallel field, the Lorentz number becomes a
non-monotonic function of field and temperature for all values of the
Fermi-liquid interaction parameter in the diffusive regime, while in the
quasiballistic case this is true only sufficiently far from the Stoner
instability.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures. Appendix A revised, notes adde
Effect of Coulomb interaction on current noise in open quantum dots
We analyze the effect of Coulomb interaction on the noise of electric current
through an open quantum dot. We demonstrate that the ensemble average value of
the noise power acquires an interaction correction even for a dot coupled to
the leads by reflectionless point contacts, when the ensemble average
conductance is known to have no interaction corrections. To leading order, the
correction to the noise originates from the formation of a nonequilibrium state
of the Coulomb field describing the interaction between electrons. We find the
dependence of the current noise power on the electron temperature, the applied
voltage bias, and the strength of the Coulomb interaction.Comment: 4.5 pages, 2 figure
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