Engineering bilinear mode coupling in circuit QED: Theory and experiment
Yaxing Zhang, Brian J. Lester, Yvonne Y. Gao, Liang Jiang, R. J., Schoelkopf, and S. M. Girvin

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework and presents experimental validation for controlling and optimizing bilinear mode coupling in circuit QED systems, crucial for quantum information processing, by analyzing drive-induced effects and decoherence mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a non-perturbative Floquet-based formalism to analyze strong drive effects on bilinear coupling, accounting for decoherence and inverse Purcell effects in circuit QED.
Findings
Drive interference significantly alters system dynamics.
Ancilla decoherence causes infidelity in SWAP gates.
Theoretical predictions match experimental data.
Abstract
Photonic states of superconducting microwave cavities controlled by transmon ancillas provide a platform for encoding and manipulating quantum information. A key challenge in scaling up the platform is the requirement to communicate on demand the information between the cavities. It has been recently demonstrated that a tunable bilinear interaction between two cavities can be realized by coupling them to a bichromatically-driven transmon ancilla, which allows swapping and interfering the multi-photon states of the cavities [Gao et al., Phys. Rev. X 8, 021073(2018)]. Here, we explore both theoretically and experimentally the regime of relatively strong drives on the ancilla needed to achieve fast SWAP gates but which can also lead to undesired non-perturbative effects that lower the SWAP fidelity. We develop a theoretical formalism based on linear response theory that allows one to…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
