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A quantum Szilard engine for two-level systems coupled to a qubit

ORAL

Abstract

The innate complexity of solid state physics exposes superconducting quantum circuits to interactions with uncontrolled degrees of freedom degrading their coherence. By using a simple stabilizer code we show that a superconducting fluxonium qubit is coupled to a two-level system (TLS) environment of unknown origin, with a relatively long energy relaxation time exceeding 50 ms. Implementing the quantum Szilard engine, the active feedback control loop allows us to decide whether the qubit heats or cools its mesoscopic TLS environment. The TLSs can either be heated up to a population inversion of ~80%, that in turn inverts the qubit population during free evolution, or they can be cooled down below the 20 mK base temperature of the dilution refrigerator. We show that the TLSs and the qubit are each other's dominant loss mechanism. Understanding and mitigating TLS environments is not only crucial to improving qubit lifetimes, but also to avoiding non-Markovian qubit dynamics.

Presenters

  • Martin Spiecker

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Martin Spiecker

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Niv Drucker

    Quantum Machines

  • Patrick Paluch

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Daria Gusenkova

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Francesco Valenti

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Gianluigi Catelani

    Forschungszentrum Jülich, Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH

  • Patrick Winkel

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Dennis Rieger

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Nicolas Gosling

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Simon Günzler

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Ivan Takmakov

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Richard Gebauer

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Oliver Sander

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Alexey V Ustinov

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Wolfgang Wernsdorfer

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Yonatan Cohen

    Quantum Machines

  • Ioan-Mihai Pop

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology