2,427 research outputs found
A superconducting qubit with Purcell protection and tunable coupling
We present a superconducting qubit for the circuit quantum electrodynamics
architecture that has a tunable coupling strength g. We show that this coupling
strength can be tuned from zero to values that are comparable with other
superconducting qubits. At g = 0 the qubit is in a decoherence free subspace
with respect to spontaneous emission induced by the Purcell effect. Furthermore
we show that in the decoherence free subspace the state of the qubit can still
be measured by either a dispersive shift on the resonance frequency of the
resonator or by a cycling-type measurement.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Tunable joint measurements in the dispersive regime of cavity QED
Joint measurements of multiple qubits have been shown to open new
possibilities for quantum information processing. Here, we present an approach
based on homodyne detection to realize such measurements in the dispersive
regime of cavity/circuit QED. By changing details of the measurement, the
readout can be tuned from extracting only single-qubit to only multi-qubit
properties. We obtain a reduced stochastic master equation describing this
measurement and its effect on the qubits. As an example, we present results
showing parity measurements of two qubits. In this situation, measurement of an
initially unentangled state can yield with near unit probability a state of
significant concurrence.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Signatures of Hong-Ou-Mandel Interference at Microwave Frequencies
Two-photon quantum interference at a beam splitter, commonly known as
Hong-Ou-Mandel interference, was recently demonstrated with
\emph{microwave-frequency} photons by Lang \emph{et
al.}\,\cite{lang:microwaveHOM}. This experiment employed circuit QED systems as
sources of microwave photons, and was based on the measurement of second-order
cross-correlation and auto-correlation functions of the microwave fields at the
outputs of the beam splitter. Here we present the calculation of these
correlation functions for the cases of inputs corresponding to: (i) trains of
\emph{pulsed} Gaussian or Lorentzian single microwave photons, and (ii)
resonant fluorescent microwave fields from \emph{continuously-driven} circuit
QED systems. The calculations include the effects of the finite bandwidth of
the detection scheme. In both cases, the signature of two-photon quantum
interference is a suppression of the second-order cross-correlation function
for small delays. The experiment described in Ref.
\onlinecite{lang:microwaveHOM} was performed with trains of \emph{Lorentzian}
single photons, and very good agreement between the calculations and the
experimental data was obtained.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Improved Superconducting Qubit Readout by Qubit-Induced Nonlinearities
In dispersive readout schemes, qubit-induced nonlinearity typically limits
the measurement fidelity by reducing the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) when the
measurement power is increased. Contrary to seeing the nonlinearity as a
problem, here we propose to use it to our advantage in a regime where it can
increase the SNR. We show analytically that such a regime exists if the qubit
has a many-level structure. We also show how this physics can account for the
high-fidelity avalanchelike measurement recently reported by Reed {\it et al.}
[arXiv:1004.4323v1].Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Improved qubit bifurcation readout in the straddling regime of circuit QED
We study bifurcation measurement of a multi-level superconducting qubit using
a nonlinear resonator biased in the straddling regime, where the resonator
frequency sits between two qubit transition frequencies. We find that
high-fidelity bifurcation measurements are possible because of the enhanced
qubit-state-dependent pull of the resonator frequency, the behavior of
qubit-induced nonlinearities and the reduced Purcell decay rate of the qubit
that can be realized in this regime. Numerical simulations find up to a
threefold improvement in qubit readout fidelity when operating in, rather than
outside of, the straddling regime. High-fidelity measurements can be obtained
at much smaller qubit-resonator couplings than current typical experimental
realizations, reducing spectral crowding and potentially simplifying the
implementation of multi-qubit devices.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Sideband Transitions and Two-Tone Spectroscopy of a Superconducting Qubit Strongly Coupled to an On-Chip Cavity
Sideband transitions are spectroscopically probed in a system consisting of a
Cooper pair box strongly but non-resonantly coupled to a superconducting
transmission line resonator. When the Cooper pair box is operated at the
optimal charge bias point the symmetry of the hamiltonian requires a two photon
process to access sidebands. The observed large dispersive ac-Stark shifts in
the sideband transitions induced by the strong non-resonant drives agree well
with our theoretical predictions. Sideband transitions are important in
realizing qubit-photon and qubit-qubit entanglement in the circuit quantum
electrodynamics architecture for quantum information processing.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, version with high resolution figures available at
http://qudev.ethz.ch/content/science/PubsPapers.htm
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