Non-destructive optical readout of a superconducting qubit
Robert D. Delaney, Maxwell D. Urmey, Sarang Mittal, Benjamin M., Brubaker, Jonathan M. Kindem, Peter S. Burns, Cindy A. Regal, Konrad W., Lehnert

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a non-destructive optical readout method for superconducting qubits using an electro-optic transducer, enabling minimal backaction and potential for quantum communication and distributed computing.
Contribution
It introduces a modular electro-optic transducer system that isolates superconducting qubits from optical photons, reducing backaction and enabling non-destructive optical readout.
Findings
Successful non-destructive optical readout of a superconducting qubit.
Backaction from the transducer is less than environmental thermal radiation.
Transducer bandwidth and noise levels are suitable for future quantum signal transduction.
Abstract
Entangling superconducting quantum processors via light would enable new means of secure communication and distributed quantum computing. However, transducing quantum signals between these disparate regimes of the electromagnetic spectrum remains an outstanding goal, and interfacing superconducting qubits with electro-optic transducers presents significant challenges due to the deleterious effects of optical photons on superconductors. Moreover, many remote entanglement protocols require multiple qubit gates both preceding and following the upconversion of the quantum state, and thus an ideal transducer should leave the state of the qubit unchanged: more precisely, the backaction from the transducer on the qubit should be minimal. Here we demonstrate non-destructive optical readout of a superconducting transmon qubit via a continuously operated electro-optic transducer. The modular…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanical and Optical Resonators · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
