Detection of low-energy fluxons from engineered long Josephson junctions for efficient computing
Han Cai, Liuqi Yu, Waltraut Wustmann, Ryan Clarke, and Kevin D. Osborn

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the creation and detection of low-energy Single-Flux Quantum signals in engineered long Josephson junctions, highlighting their potential for energy-efficient ballistic logic gates.
Contribution
It introduces a method to generate and detect low-energy SFQs in engineered long JJs, advancing the development of ballistic superconducting logic devices.
Findings
SFQ detection events are synchronous with launch events.
SFQ can traverse the LJJ ballistically with minimal velocity change.
Jitter is mainly due to detector noise.
Abstract
Single-Flux Quantum (SFQ) digital logic is typically energy efficient and fast, and logic that uses ballistic and reversible principles provides a new platform to improve efficiency. We are studying long Josephson junctions (long JJs), SFQs within them, and an SFQ detector, all intended for future ballistic logic gate experiments. Specifically, we launch low-energy SFQ into engineered long JJs made from an array of 80 JJs and connecting inductors. The component JJs have critical currents of only 7.5 uA such that the Josephson penetration depth is approximately 2.4 unit cells, and the SFQ's stationary energy in the LJJ is ~47 zJ. The circuit measured consisted of three components: an SFQ launcher, the LJJ, and an SFQ detector that uses JJ critical currents of only 15-20 uA. The circuit was measured in two environments: at 4.2 K in a helium dunk probe and 3.5~K in a cryogen-free…
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