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Superconducting qubit control with a system of an integrated microwave board and FPGA

ORAL

Abstract

As the number of qubits increases toward the realization of fault-tolerant superconducting quantum computers, current microwave control systems will be limiting factor for the scalability. To address this issue, it is necessary to integrate and miniaturize a large number of microwave control units. As microwave components in C-and X-bands are prone to crosstalk on a board, which is detrimental to the qubit control fidelity, they are often assembled with connectorized milling cases for individual channels, leading to an obstacle to scaling up the system size.

In this work, we integrate multiple microwave channels on a single board directly attached to an FPGA board. The differential microwave circuits achieve low crosstalk between channels over a wide bandwidth of 2 GHz.

In this talk, we discuss the performance and the scalability of the microwave control system. We also report experimental results on superconducting transmon qubits controlled by the system.

Presenters

  • Makoto Negoro

    QIQB, Osaka University; QuEL, Inc.

Authors

  • Makoto Negoro

    QIQB, Osaka University; QuEL, Inc.

  • Kazuhisa Ogawa

    QIQB, Osaka University

  • Takefumi MIYOSHI

    e-trees.Japan, Inc.; QIQB, Osaka University; QuEL, Inc.

  • Hidehisa Shiomi

    QIQB, Osaka University

  • Shinichi Morisaka

    QIQB, Osaka University

  • Mitsuki Kobachi

    QIQB, Osaka University

  • Kazuma Moriuchi

    QIQB, Osaka University

  • Ryohei Niwase

    e-trees.Japan, Inc.

  • Yuta Kawai

    QIQB, Osaka University

  • Keisuke Koike

    e-trees.Japan, Inc.

  • Satoshi Funada

    e-trees.Japan, Inc.

  • Shuhei Tamate

    RIKEN Center for Quantum Computing; Research Center for Advanced Science and Technology (RCAST), The University of Tokyo

  • Yutaka Tabuchi

    RIKEN Center for Quantum Computing

  • Yasunobu Nakamura

    RIKEN Center for Quantum Computing, RIKEN Center for Quantum Computing; Research Center for Advanced Science and Technology (RCAST), The University of Tokyo, Univ of Tokyo, RCAST, The University of Tokyo; RIKEN Center for Quantum Computing