Dephasing-Robust Characterization of Temporally-Correlated Qubit Control Noise
ORAL
Abstract
Precise control of quantum systems is a requirement for quantum technologies spanning fields from quantum metrology to quantum computing. A major factor limiting control fidelity is noise due to fluctuations in control fields. To design optimally robust control sequences, it is first necessary to have a high-accuracy characterization of the statistical properties of control noise. Previous approaches to characterize control noise are limited by their vulnerability to low-frequency dephasing noise, which can overwhelm the target control noise signal and prevent reliable characterization. In this work, we apply optimized narrowband quantum control sequences to probe fine spectral features of amplitude control noise while simultaneously suppressing dephasing noise. This extends the spectroscopy of control noise to experimentally relevant settings where dephasing is strong relative to control noise, such as superconducting qubits.
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Presenters
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Robert Barr
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
Authors
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Robert Barr
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
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Yasuo Oda
Johns Hopkins University
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Colin Trout
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
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Kevin Schultz
Applied Phys Lab/JHU
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Gregory Quiroz
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics
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Leigh M Norris
Dartmouth College
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David Clader
Applied Phys Lab/JHU