Implementing and characterizing precise multi-qubit measurements
J. Z. Blumoff, K. Chou, C. Shen, M. Reagor, C. Axline, R.T. Brierley,, M. P. Silveri, C. Wang, B. Vlastakis, S. E. Nigg, L. Frunzio, M. H. Devoret,, L. Jiang, S. M. Girvin, R. J. Schoelkopf

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates precise, high-fidelity multi-qubit measurements in a superconducting circuit, enabling non-destructive extraction of correlations crucial for quantum error correction and simulation.
Contribution
It introduces a protocol for real-time, arbitrary Pauli operator measurements in a four-qubit cQED system with comprehensive characterization methods.
Findings
Achieved high-fidelity subset-parity measurements on three qubits.
Developed new fidelity measures for quantum detector and measurement process.
Enhanced measurement performance with an error-heralding technique.
Abstract
There are two general requirements to harness the computational power of quantum mechanics: the ability to manipulate the evolution of an isolated system and the ability to faithfully extract information from it. Quantum error correction and simulation often make a more exacting demand: the ability to perform non-destructive measurements of specific correlations within that system. We realize such measurements by employing a protocol adapted from [S. Nigg and S. M. Girvin, Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, 243604 (2013)], enabling real-time selection of arbitrary register-wide Pauli operators. Our implementation consists of a simple circuit quantum electrodynamics (cQED) module of four highly-coherent 3D transmon qubits, collectively coupled to a high-Q superconducting microwave cavity. As a demonstration, we enact all seven nontrivial subset-parity measurements on our three-qubit register. For…
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