3D microwave cavity with magnetic flux control and enhanced quality factor
Yarema Reshitnyk, Markus Jerger, Arkady Fedorov

TL;DR
This paper introduces a hybrid 3D superconducting microwave cavity combining aluminium and copper to achieve high quality factors and magnetic field control, enhancing quantum information processing capabilities.
Contribution
The authors developed a hybrid 3D cavity with improved quality factor and magnetic control, bridging the gap between high-Q superconducting and magnetic field-transparent cavities.
Findings
Measured internal quality factor of 102,000, an order of magnitude higher than previous copper cavities.
Demonstrated individual magnetic control of three superconducting qubits within the cavity.
Achieved enhanced thermal linkage and magnetic field control in a 3D cavity platform.
Abstract
Three-dimensional (3D) superconducting microwave cavities with large mode volumes typically have high quality factors (). This is due to a reduced sensitivity to surface dielectric losses, which is the limiting source of dissipation in two-dimensional transmission line resonators. In recent years, 3D microwave cavities have been extensively used for coupling and interacting with superconducting quantum bits (qubits), providing a versatile platform for quantum information processing and hybrid quantum systems. A current issue that has arisen is that 3D superconducting cavities do not permit magnetic field control of qubits embedded in these cavities. In contrast, microwave cavities made of normal metals can be transparent to magnetic fields, but experience a much lower quality factor (), which negates many of the advantages of the 3D architecture. In an attempt to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum and electron transport phenomena · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Advanced Frequency and Time Standards
