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Continuous Error Correction with Parity Measurements

ORAL

Abstract

In a multi-qubit system, performing continuous measurements of joint properties such as parity allows us to study the collapse dynamics of multipartite states. Simultaneous parity measurements in a three-qubit system also act as continuous stabilizer detection for a quantum error correction code, allowing us to observe a single qubit flip in real time. The parity of two superconducting transmons may be directly measured without qubit ancilla by coupling them to a single readout resonator, using identical dispersive coupling chis much larger than the resonator bandwidth kappa. Using a chip with three qubits and connecting each of two pairs to a parity readout resonator, we implement the two parity measurements needed to perform the conventional three-qubit bit-flip code. We control the qubits from a field programmable gate array board which also continuously monitors the parity, allowing for low latency correction pulses to be applied when a qubit flip occurs. Using this method, we extend the lifetime of an excited logical state past the lifetime of an excited bare qubit.

Presenters

  • William Livingston

    University of California, Berkeley, Univ of California – Berkeley, Univ of California - Berkeley

Authors

  • William Livingston

    University of California, Berkeley, Univ of California – Berkeley, Univ of California - Berkeley

  • Machiel S Blok

    Univ of California – Berkeley, University of Rochester

  • Juan Atalaya

    Google - Venice, CA, University of California, Berkeley

  • Razieh Mohseninia

    Univ of Southern California

  • Andrew N Jordan

    University of Rochester, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Rochester

  • Justin G. Dressel

    Chapman Univ, Chapman University

  • Irfan Siddiqi

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, Univ of California - Berkeley, Univ of California – Berkeley, Quantum Nanoelectronics Lab, UC Berkeley, Physics, University of California, Berkeley, Quantum Nanoelectronics Laboratory, Dept. of Physics, University of California, Berkeley