In a system of two tunable-frequency qubits, it is well-known that adiabatic
tuning into strong coupling-interaction regions between the qubit subspace and
the rest of the Hilbert space can be used to generate an effective controlled Z
rotation. We address the problem of determining a preferable adiabatic
trajectory along which to tune the qubit frequency, and apply this to the
flux-tunable transmon model. The especially minimally anharmonic nature of
these quantum processors makes them good candidates for qubit control using
non-computational states, as long as higher-level leakage is properly
addressed. While the statement of this method has occurred multiple times in
literature, there has been little discussion of which trajectories may be used.
We present a generalized method for optimizing parameterized families of
possible flux trajectories and provide examples of use on five test families of
one and two parameters.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures; will be published in AIP Advance