275 research outputs found
Kinetics of the superconducting charge qubit in the presence of a quasiparticle
We investigate the energy and phase relaxation of a superconducting qubit
caused by a single quasiparticle. In our model, the qubit is an isolated system
consisting of a small island (Cooper-pair box) and a larger superconductor
(reservoir) connected with each other by a tunable Josephson junction. If such
system contains an odd number of electrons, then even at lowest temperatures a
single quasiparticle is present in the qubit. Tunneling of a quasiparticle
between the reservoir and the Cooper-pair box results in the relaxation of the
qubit. We derive master equations governing the evolution of the qubit
coherences and populations. We find that the kinetics of the qubit can be
characterized by two time scales - quasiparticle escape time from reservoir to
the box, , and quasiparticle relaxation time . The
former is determined by the dimensionless normal-state conductance of the
Josephson junction and one-electron level spacing in the reservoir
(), and the latter is due to electron-phonon
interaction. We find that phase coherence is damped on the time scale of
. The qubit energy relaxation depends on the ratio of the two
characteristic times, and , and also on the ratio of
temperature to the Josephson energy .Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, final version as published in PRB, some changes,
reference adde
Spectroscopy of superconducting charge qubits coupled by a Josephson inductance
We have designed and experimentally implemented a circuit of
inductively-coupled superconducting charge qubits, where a Josephson junction
is used as an inductance, and the coupling between the qubits is controlled by
an applied magnetic flux. Spectroscopic measurements on the circuit are in good
agreement with theoretical calculations. We observed anticrossings which
originate from the coupling between the qubit and the plasma mode of the
Josephson junction. Moreover, the size of the anticrossing depends on the
external magnetic flux, which demonstrates the controllability of the coupling.Comment: Accepted for publication in PRB. 11 pages, 7 figure
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
Observation of Berry's Phase in a Solid State Qubit
In quantum information science, the phase of a wavefunction plays an
important role in encoding information. While most experiments in this field
rely on dynamic effects to manipulate this information, an alternative approach
is to use geometric phase, which has been argued to have potential fault
tolerance. We demonstrate the controlled accumulation of a geometric phase,
Berry's phase, in a superconducting qubit, manipulating the qubit geometrically
using microwave radiation, and observing the accumulated phase in an
interference experiment. We find excellent agreement with Berry's predictions,
and also observe a geometry dependent contribution to dephasing.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, version with high resolution figures available at
http://qudev.ethz.ch/content/science/PubsPapers.htm
Reaching the quantum limit of sensitivity in electron spin resonance
We report pulsed electron-spin resonance (ESR) measurements on an ensemble of
Bismuth donors in Silicon cooled at 10mK in a dilution refrigerator. Using a
Josephson parametric microwave amplifier combined with high-quality factor
superconducting micro-resonators cooled at millikelvin temperatures, we improve
the state-of-the-art sensitivity of inductive ESR detection by nearly 4 orders
of magnitude. We demonstrate the detection of 1700 bismuth donor spins in
silicon within a single Hahn echo with unit signal-to-noise (SNR) ratio,
reduced to just 150 spins by averaging a single Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill
sequence. This unprecedented sensitivity reaches the limit set by quantum
fluctuations of the electromagnetic field instead of thermal or technical
noise, which constitutes a novel regime for magnetic resonance.Comment: Main text : 10 pages, 4 figures. Supplementary text : 16 pages, 8
figure
Strong Coupling of a Spin Ensemble to a Superconducting Resonator
We report the realization of a quantum circuit in which an ensemble of
electronic spins is coupled to a frequency tunable superconducting resonator.
The spins are Nitrogen-Vacancy centers in a diamond crystal. The achievement of
strong coupling is manifested by the appearance of a vacuum Rabi splitting in
the transmission spectrum of the resonator when its frequency is tuned through
the NV center electron spin resonance.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Tunable resonators for quantum circuits
We have designed, fabricated and measured high-Q coplanar
waveguide microwave resonators whose resonance frequency is made tunable with
magnetic field by inserting a DC-SQUID array (including 1 or 7 SQUIDs) inside.
Their tunability range is 30% of the zero field frequency. Their quality factor
reaches up to 3. We present a model based on thermal fluctuations
that accounts for the dependance of the quality factor with magnetic field.Comment: subm. to JLTP (Proc. of LTD12 conference
Capacitively Enhanced Thermal Escape in Underdamped Josephson Junctions
We have studied experimentally the escape dynamics in underdamped
capacitively shunted and unshunted Josephson junctions with submicroampere
critical currents below 0.5 K temperatures. In the shunted junctions, thermal
activation process was preserved up to the highest temperature where the escape
in the unshunted junctions exhibits the phase diffusion. Our observations in
the shunted junctions are in good agreement with the standard thermal
activation escape, unlike the results in the unshunted junctions.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Multi-mode storage and retrieval of microwave fields in a spin ensemble
A quantum memory at microwave frequencies, able to store the state of
multiple superconducting qubits for long times, is a key element for quantum
information processing. Electronic and nuclear spins are natural candidates for
the storage medium as their coherence time can be well above one second.
Benefiting from these long coherence times requires to apply the refocusing
techniques used in magnetic resonance, a major challenge in the context of
hybrid quantum circuits. Here we report the first implementation of such a
scheme, using ensembles of nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centres in diamond coupled to
a superconducting resonator, in a setup compatible with superconducting qubit
technology. We implement the active reset of the NV spins into their ground
state by optical pumping and their refocusing by Hahn echo sequences. This
enables the storage of multiple microwave pulses at the picoWatt level and
their retrieval after up to s, a three orders of magnitude improvement
compared to previous experiments.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures + Supplementary information (text and 6 figures
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