Trapping and manipulating single-electron qubits on solid neon in a hybrid circuit quantum electrodynamics architecture
ORAL
Abstract
The promise of quantum computing has driven a persistent quest for new qubit platforms with long coherence, fast operation, and large scalability. Electrons, ubiquitous elementary particles of nonzero charge, spin, and mass, have commonly been perceived as paradigmatic local quantum information carriers. Despite superior controllability and configurability, their practical performance as qubits via either motional or spin states depends critically on their material environment. Here we report our experimental realization of a new qubit platform based upon isolated single electrons trapped on an ultraclean solid neon surface in vacuum. By integrating an electron trap in a circuit quantum electrodynamics architecture, we achieve strong coupling between the motional states of a single electron and a single microwave photon in an on-chip superconducting resonator. Qubit gate operations and dispersive readout are implemented to measure the energy relaxation time T1 of 15 μs and phase coherence time T2 over 200 ns. These results indicate that the electron-on-solid-neon qubit already performs near the state-of-the-art as a charge qubit.
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Presenters
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Xianjing Zhou
Argonne National Laboratory
Authors
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Xianjing Zhou
Argonne National Laboratory
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Gerwin Koolstra
University of California, Berkeley
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Xufeng Zhang
Argonne National Laboratory
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Ge I Yang
University of Chicago
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Xu Han
Argonne National Laboratory
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Brennan Dizdar
University of Chicago
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Divan Ralu
Center for Nanomaterials, Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, Illinois 60439, Argonne National Laboratory
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Wei Guo
Florida State University; National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Florida State University
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Kater W Murch
Washington University, St. Louis
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David Schuster
University of Chicago
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Dafei Jin
Argonne National Laboratory