Optimization of the resonator-induced phase gate for superconducting qubits
Moein Malekakhlagh, William Shanks, Hanhee Paik

TL;DR
This paper analyzes and optimizes the resonator-induced phase gate for superconducting qubits, revealing leakage mechanisms and proposing device parameter adjustments to improve gate fidelity.
Contribution
It introduces an ab-initio model based on Josephson nonlinearity, identifying leakage channels and suggesting weaker qubit anharmonicity to suppress leakage.
Findings
Leakage transitions involve high-excitation states.
Weaker anharmonicity reduces leakage and collision density.
Device optimization strategies are proposed for better gate performance.
Abstract
The resonator-induced phase gate is a two-qubit operation in which driving a bus resonator induces a state-dependent phase shift on the qubits equivalent to an effective interaction. In principle, the dispersive nature of the gate offers flexibility for qubit parameters. However, the drive can cause resonator and qubit leakage, the physics of which cannot be fully captured using either the existing Jaynes-Cummings or Kerr models. In this paper, we adopt an ab-initio model based on Josephson nonlinearity for transmon qubits. The ab-initio analysis agrees well with the Kerr model in terms of capturing the effective interaction in the weak-drive dispersive regime. In addition, however, it reveals numerous leakage transitions involving high-excitation qubit states. We analyze the physics behind such novel leakage channels, demonstrate the connection with specific qubits-resonator…
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