Gradual partial-collapse theory for ideal nondemolition measurements of qubits in circuit QED
Wei Feng, Cheng Zhang, Zhong Wang, Lupei Qin, Xin-Qi Li

TL;DR
This paper develops a gradual partial-collapse theory for ideal nondemolition qubit measurements in circuit QED using longitudinal coupling, enabling better understanding and control of measurement processes and qubit state restoration.
Contribution
It introduces a partial-collapse measurement framework for longitudinal coupling in circuit QED, extending quantum trajectory and Bayesian methods to this new scheme.
Findings
Constructed joint qubit-cavity entangled states under continuous measurement.
Analyzed quantum efficiency, qubit purity, and signal-to-noise ratio.
Proposed a cavity reset scheme to restore qubit purity after measurement.
Abstract
The conventional method of qubit measurements in circuit QED is employing the dispersive regime of qubit-cavity coupling, which results in an approximated scheme of quantum nondemolition (QND) readout. This scheme becomes problematic in the case of strong coupling and/or strong measurement drive, owing to the so-called Purcell effect. A recent proposal by virtue of longitudinal coupling suggests a new scheme to realize fast, high-fidelity, and {\it ideal QND} readout of qubit state. The aim of the present work is twofold: (i) In parallel to what has been done in the past years for the dispersive readout, we carry out the gradual partial-collapse theory for this recent scheme, in terms of both the quantum trajectory equation and quantum Bayesian approaches. The partial-collapse weak measurement theory is useful for such as the measurement-based feedback control and other quantum…
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