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Multiplexed stabilization of cat qubits

ORAL

Abstract

Stabilized cat qubits have recently attracted interest due to their tunable noise bias, a property which can be exploited to improve error correction thresholds and reduce fault-tolerance overhead. Cat qubits have been realized in circuit QED experiments, where nonlinear circuit elements facilitate the driven-dissipative processes that stabilize the cat states. In order to scale up a cat-qubit architecture, it will be crucial to stabilize and couple multiple cat qubits in a way that both maximizes connectivity and minimizes crosstalk. In this talk, I will show how multiple cat qubits can be simultaneously stabilized by a single, shared nonlinear element, enabling increased connectivity and hardware efficiency. Moreover, I will discuss the sources of crosstalk in such architectures and show how the dominant sources can be effectively suppressed via filtering.

Presenters

  • Connor Hann

    Yale University

Authors

  • Connor Hann

    Yale University

  • Patricio Arrangoiz-Arriola

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • Kyungjoo Noh

    Yale University, AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • Amir Safavi-Naeini

    Applied Physics, Stanford University, Stanford University

  • Liang Jiang

    University of Chicago, Department of Molecular Engineering, The University of Chicago, Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering, University of Chicago, Yale University, Pritzker school of molecular engineering, The University of Chicago

  • Fernando Brandao

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing, Caltech/Amazon