Entanglement and Quantum Error Correction with Superconducting Qubits
Matthew Reed

TL;DR
This paper discusses the implementation of superconducting qubits in circuit QED architecture, demonstrating entanglement, quantum error correction, and system control techniques, with improvements in qubit coherence and fidelity.
Contribution
It introduces a superconducting qubit system with enhanced coherence, demonstrating entanglement, quantum error correction, and advanced control methods in circuit QED.
Findings
Successful generation of Bell and GHZ states
Implementation of autonomous quantum error correction
Enhanced qubit coherence with 3D cavity mode
Abstract
A quantum computer will use the properties of quantum physics to solve certain computational problems much faster than otherwise possible. One promising potential implementation is to use superconducting quantum bits in the circuit quantum electrodynamics (cQED) architecture. There, the low energy states of a nonlinear electronic oscillator are isolated and addressed as a qubit. These qubits are capacitively coupled to the modes of a microwave-frequency transmission line resonator which serves as a quantum communication bus. Microwave electrical pulses are applied to the resonator to manipulate or measure the qubit state. State control is calibrated using diagnostic sequences that expose systematic errors. Hybridization of the resonator with the qubit gives it a nonlinear response when driven strongly, useful for amplifying the measurement signal to enhance accuracy. Qubits coupled to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture
