Vortex-Controlled Quasiparticle Multiplication and Self-Growth Dynamics in Superconducting Resonators
Joong M. Park, Martin Mootz, Richard H. J. Kim, Zhixiang Chong, Samuel Haeuser, Randall K. Chan, Liang Luo, Dominic P. Goronzy, Mark C. Hersam, Ilias E. Perakis, Akshay A Murthy, Alexander Romanenko, Anna Grassellino, and Jigang Wang

TL;DR
This study uncovers how vortices in superconducting resonators can cause quasiparticle multiplication, leading to increased decoherence in quantum circuits, and provides spectroscopic evidence of this nonequilibrium process.
Contribution
It demonstrates vortex-controlled quasiparticle self-generation in superconductors, revealing a new mechanism affecting qubit coherence and offering insights for improving quantum device performance.
Findings
Vortex density strongly influences quasiparticle multiplication.
Quasiparticle population continues to grow post phonon saturation.
Estimated 34% increase in quasiparticle density at high vortex densities.
Abstract
Even in the quantum limit, non-equilibrium quasiparticle (QP) populations induce QP poisoning that irreversibly relaxes the quantum state and significantly degrades the coherence of transmon qubits. A particularly detrimental yet previously unexplored mechanism arises from QP multiplication facilitated by vortex trapping in superconducting quantum circuits, where a high-energy QP relaxes by breaking additional Cooper pairs and amplifying the QP population due to the locally reduced excitation gap and enhanced quantum confinement within the vortex core. Here we directly resolve this elusive QP multiplication process by revealing vortex-controlled QP self-generation in a highly nonequilibrium regime preceding the phonon bottleneck of QP relaxation. At sufficiently low fluence, femtosecond-resolved magneto-reflection spectroscopy directly reveals a continuously increasing QP population…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Topological Materials and Phenomena · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
