Stabilizing entanglement autonomously between two superconducting qubits
S. Shankar, M. Hatridge, Z. Leghtas, K. M. Sliwa, A. Narla, U. Vool,, S. M. Girvin, L. Frunzio, M. Mirrahimi, M. H. Devoret

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates an autonomous feedback method to stabilize a Bell state of two superconducting qubits, using engineered dissipation and continuous drives, advancing quantum error correction capabilities.
Contribution
It introduces a novel autonomous feedback scheme that stabilizes entanglement without external measurement-based feedback, simplifying quantum state stabilization.
Findings
Successfully stabilized a Bell state for an arbitrary time
Used engineered dissipation to counteract decoherence
Achieved autonomous entanglement stabilization in superconducting qubits
Abstract
Quantum error-correction codes would protect an arbitrary state of a multi-qubit register against decoherence-induced errors, but their implementation is an outstanding challenge for the development of large-scale quantum computers. A first step is to stabilize a non-equilibrium state of a simple quantum system such as a qubit or a cavity mode in the presence of decoherence. Several groups have recently accomplished this goal using measurement-based feedback schemes. A next step is to prepare and stabilize a state of a composite system. Here we demonstrate the stabilization of an entangled Bell state of a quantum register of two superconducting qubits for an arbitrary time. Our result is achieved by an autonomous feedback scheme which combines continuous drives along with a specifically engineered coupling between the two-qubit register and a dissipative reservoir. Similar autonomous…
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