Magnetic Noise from Metal Objects near Qubit Arrays
Jonathan Kenny, Hruday Mallubhotla, Robert Joynt

TL;DR
This paper develops a simple, general formalism to quantify magnetic noise from small metal objects near qubits, revealing how noise scales with object size and impacting quantum information coherence.
Contribution
It introduces a new, straightforward formula for magnetic noise correlation from arbitrary-shaped small objects, applicable to nanoscale quantum devices.
Findings
Noise correlation formula derived for small objects
Closed-form solution for spherical objects provided
Decoherence rates scale inversely with object size D
Abstract
All metal objects support fluctuating currents that are responsible for evanescent-wave Johnson noise in their vicinity due both to thermal and quantum effects. The noise fields can decohere qubits in their neighborhood. It is quantified by the average value of and its time Fourier transform. We develop the formalism particularly for objects whose dimensions are small compared with the skin depth, which is the appropriate regime for nanoscale devices. This leads to a general and surprisingly simple formula for the noise correlation function of an object of arbitrary shape. This formula has a clear physical interpretation in terms of induced currents in the object. It can also be the basis for straightforward numerical evaluation. For a sphere, a solution is given in closed form in terms of a generalized multipole expansion. Plots of the solution illustrate the physical…
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