Dynamical decoupling and noise spectroscopy with a superconducting flux qubit
Jonas Bylander, Simon Gustavsson, Fei Yan, Fumiki Yoshihara, Khalil, Harrabi, George Fitch, David G. Cory, Yasunobu Nakamura, Jaw-Shen Tsai,, William D. Oliver

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how dynamical decoupling with CPMG sequences significantly extends the coherence time of a superconducting flux qubit by mitigating low-frequency noise, enabling detailed noise spectroscopy.
Contribution
It introduces a method to use dynamical decoupling for noise mitigation and spectroscopy in superconducting qubits, achieving a 50-fold increase in T2 coherence time.
Findings
50-fold increase in T2 coherence time using CPMG sequences
Relaxation-limited T2 of 23 microseconds achieved
Successful reconstruction of environmental noise spectral density
Abstract
The characterization and mitigation of decoherence in natural and artificial two-level systems (qubits) is fundamental to quantum information science and its applications. Decoherence of a quantum superposition state arises from the interaction between the constituent system and the uncontrolled degrees of freedom in its environment. Within the standard Bloch-Redfield picture of two-level system dynamics, qubit decoherence is characterized by two rates: a longitudinal relaxation rate Gamma1 due to the exchange of energy with the environment, and a transverse relaxation rate Gamma2 = Gamma1/2 + Gamma_phi which contains the pure dephasing rate Gamma_phi. Irreversible energy relaxation can only be mitigated by reducing the amount of environmental noise, reducing the qubit's internal sensitivity to that noise, or through multi-qubit encoding and error correction protocols (which already…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Quantum Information and Cryptography
