Extended Josephson junction qubit system
Andrey Grankin, Alicia J. Koll\'ar, Mohammad Hafezi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new quantum electrodynamics architecture using extended Josephson Junctions that can host multiple nonlinear modes, enabling multi-qubit interactions and simulations of complex quantum phenomena.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive analysis of extended Josephson Junctions, demonstrating their potential as multi-qubit systems and platforms for simulating many-body quantum phenomena.
Findings
Extended junctions host multiple nonlinear plasmon modes.
Distinct spatial phase modes enable individual addressing.
The setup can simulate the generalized Bose-Hubbard model.
Abstract
Circuit quantum electrodynamics (QED) has emerged as a promising platform for implementing quantum computation and simulation. Typically, junctions in these systems are of a sufficiently small size, such that only the lowest plasma oscillation is relevant. The interplay between the Josephson effect and charging energy renders this mode nonlinear, forming the basis of a qubit. In this work, we introduce a novel QED architecture based on extended Josephson Junctions (JJs), which possess a non-negligible spatial extent. We present a comprehensive microscopic analysis and demonstrate that each extended junction can host multiple nonlinear plasmon modes, effectively functioning as a multi-qubit interacting system, in contrast to conventional JJs. Furthermore, the phase modes exhibit distinct spatial profiles, enabling individual addressing through frequency-momentum selective coupling to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
