Mitigating crosstalk errors for simultaneous single-qubit gates on a superconducting quantum processor
Jaap J. Wesdorp, Eric Hyypp\"a, Joona Andersson, Janos Adam, Rohit Beriwal, Ville Bergholm, Saga Dahl, Simone Diego Fasciati, Alejandro Gomez Friero, Zheming Gao, Daria Gusenkova, Andrew Guthrie, Johannes Heinsoo, Tuukka Hiltunen, Keiran Holland, Amin Hosseinkhani, Sinan Inel

TL;DR
This paper presents a combined approach of model-based qubit frequency optimization and pulse shaping techniques to mitigate crosstalk errors during simultaneous single-qubit gates on a large superconducting quantum processor, enhancing scalability.
Contribution
It introduces an analytical crosstalk error model, a crosstalk transition suppression pulse, and demonstrates systematic error reduction and bandwidth savings for scalable quantum computing.
Findings
Achieved 99.96% fidelity for simultaneous gates on 16-ns pulses.
Reduced qubit frequency bandwidth requirements by combining CTS with frequency optimization.
Validated error mitigation approach on a 49-qubit processor with simulations up to 1000 qubits.
Abstract
Single-qubit gates on superconducting quantum processors are typically implemented using microwave pulses applied through dedicated control lines. However, these microwave pulses may also drive other qubits due to crosstalk arising from capacitive coupling and wavefunction overlap in systems with closely spaced transition frequencies. Crosstalk and frequency crowding increase errors during simultaneous single-qubit operations relative to isolated gates, thus forming a major bottleneck for scaling superconducting quantum processors. In this work, we combine model-based qubit frequency optimization with pulse shaping to demonstrate crosstalk error mitigation in single-qubit gates on a 49-qubit superconducting quantum processor. We introduce and experimentally verify an analytical model of simultaneous single-qubit gate error caused by microwave crosstalk that depends on a given pulse…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
