Engineering the microwave to infrared noise photon flux for superconducting quantum systems
Sergey Danilin, Jo\~ao Barbosa, Michael Farage, Zimo Zhao, Xiaobang, Shang, Jonathan Burnett, Nick Ridler, Chong Li, Martin Weides

TL;DR
This paper analyzes and demonstrates the effectiveness of cryogenic microwave filters in suppressing high-frequency noise photons that cause decoherence in superconducting quantum circuits, providing quantitative data and experimental validation.
Contribution
It introduces compact cryogenic microwave filters with specific dielectric fillings, providing detailed measurements and analysis of their noise suppression capabilities up to 70 GHz.
Findings
Significant reduction in noise photon flux with the filters.
Measured dielectric properties of Esorb-230 in the pair-breaking frequency range.
Experimental validation of filter performance at cryogenic temperatures.
Abstract
Electromagnetic filtering is essential for the coherent control, operation and readout of superconducting quantum circuits at milliKelvin temperatures. The suppression of spurious modes around transition frequencies of a few GHz is well understood and mainly achieved by on-chip and package considerations. Noise photons of higher frequencies -- beyond the pair-breaking energies -- cause decoherence and require spectral engineering before reaching the packaged quantum chip. The external wires that pass into the refrigerator and go down to the quantum circuit provide a direct path for these photons. This article contains quantitative analysis and experimental data for the noise photon flux through coaxial, filtered wiring. The attenuation of the coaxial cable at room temperature and the noise photon flux estimates for typical wiring configurations are provided. Compact cryogenic microwave…
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