588 research outputs found
Measuring the Decoherence of a Quantronium Qubit with the Cavity Bifurcation Amplifier
Dispersive readouts for superconducting qubits have the advantage of speed
and minimal invasiveness. We have developed such an amplifier, the Cavity
Bifurcation Amplifier (CBA) [10], and applied it to the readout of the
quantronium qubit [2]. It consists of a Josephson junction embedded in a
microwave on-chip resonator. In contrast with the Josephson bifurcation
amplifier [17], which has an on-chip capacitor shunting a junction, the
resonator is based on a simple coplanar waveguide imposing a pre-determined
frequency and whose other RF characteristics like the quality factor are easily
controlled and optimized. Under proper microwave irradiation conditions, the
CBA has two metastable states. Which state is adopted by the CBA depends on the
state of a quantronium qubit coupled to the CBA's junction. Due to the MHz
repetition rate and large signal to noise ratio we can show directly that the
coherence is limited by 1/f gate charge noise when biased at the sweet spot - a
point insensitive to first order gate charge fluctuations. This architecture
lends itself to scalable quantum computing using a multi-resonator chip with
multiplexed readouts.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures To be published in Physical Review
Detecting charge noise with a Josephson junction: A problem of thermal escape in presence of non-Gaussian fluctuations
Motivated by several experimental activities to detect charge noise produced
by a mesoscopic conductor with a Josephson junction as on-chip detector, the
switching rate out of its zero-voltage state is studied. This process is
related to the fundamental problem of thermal escape in presence of
non-Gaussian fluctuations. In the relevant case of weak higher than second
order cumulants, an effective Fokker-Planck equation is derived, which is then
used to obtain an explicit expression for the escape rate. Specific results for
the rate asymmetry due to the third moment of current noise allow to analyse
experimental data and to optimize detection circuits.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure; minor typos corrected, some revisions in the tex
Circuit QED and engineering charge based superconducting qubits
The last two decades have seen tremendous advances in our ability to generate
and manipulate quantum coherence in mesoscopic superconducting circuits. These
advances have opened up the study of quantum optics of microwave photons in
superconducting circuits as well as providing important hardware for the
manipulation of quantum information. Focusing primarily on charge-based qubits,
we provide a brief overview of these developments and discuss the present state
of the art. We also survey the remarkable progress that has been made in
realizing circuit quantum electrodynamics (QED) in which superconducting
artificial atoms are strongly coupled to individual microwave photons.Comment: Proceedings of Nobel Symposium 141: Qubits for Future Quantum
Informatio
Influence of Magnetic Field on Effective Electron-Electron Interactions in a Copper Wire
We have measured in a copper wire the energy exchange rate between
quasiparticles as a function of the applied magnetic field. We find that the
effective electron-electron interaction is strongly modified by the magnetic
field, suggesting that magnetic impurities play a role on the interaction
processes.Comment: latex anthore.tex, 8 files, 6 figures, 7 pages in: Proceedings of the
XXXVIth Rencontres de Moriond `Electronic Correlations: From Meso- to
Nano-physics' Les Arcs, France January 20-27, 2001 [SPEC-S01/027
Symmetries and collective excitations in large superconducting circuits
The intriguing appeal of circuits lies in their modularity and ease of
fabrication. Based on a toolbox of simple building blocks, circuits present a
powerful framework for achieving new functionality by combining circuit
elements into larger networks. It is an open question to what degree modularity
also holds for quantum circuits -- circuits made of superconducting material,
in which electric voltages and currents are governed by the laws of quantum
physics. If realizable, quantum coherence in larger circuit networks has great
potential for advances in quantum information processing including topological
protection from decoherence. Here, we present theory suitable for quantitative
modeling of such large circuits and discuss its application to the fluxonium
device. Our approach makes use of approximate symmetries exhibited by the
circuit, and enables us to obtain new predictions for the energy spectrum of
the fluxonium device which can be tested with current experimental technology
Introduction to Quantum Noise, Measurement and Amplification
The topic of quantum noise has become extremely timely due to the rise of
quantum information physics and the resulting interchange of ideas between the
condensed matter and AMO/quantum optics communities. This review gives a
pedagogical introduction to the physics of quantum noise and its connections to
quantum measurement and quantum amplification. After introducing quantum noise
spectra and methods for their detection, we describe the basics of weak
continuous measurements. Particular attention is given to treating the standard
quantum limit on linear amplifiers and position detectors using a general
linear-response framework. We show how this approach relates to the standard
Haus-Caves quantum limit for a bosonic amplifier known in quantum optics, and
illustrate its application for the case of electrical circuits, including
mesoscopic detectors and resonant cavity detectors.Comment: Substantial improvements over initial version; include supplemental
appendices
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