Investigating effects of increased connectivity on superconducting qubit gate speed limits
ORAL
Abstract
Fast two-qubit entangling gates are essential for quantum computers with finite coherence times. Due to the limit of interaction strength among qubits, there exists a theoretical speed limit for a given two-qubit entangling gate. This speed limit has been explicitly found only for a two-qubit system and under the assumption of negligible single qubit gate time. We demonstrate such a speed limit experimentally using optimal control on two superconducting transmon qubits with a fixed capacitive coupling. We then investigate the effect of additional couplings on the speed limit, both through introduction of an ancillary qubit as well as through utilization of higher transmon energy states. Finally, we discuss the generalization to many qubit systems where properly leveraging all available couplings can provide dramatic speedups, thus necessitating the co-design of quantum computers from both theorists and experimentalists for optimal gate performance.
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Presenters
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Joel Howard
Colorado School of Mines
Authors
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Joel Howard
Colorado School of Mines
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Meenakshi Singh
Colorado School of Mines
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Zhexuan Gong
Colorado School of Mines
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David Pappas
National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder, Rigetti Computing
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Alexander Lidiak
Colorado School of Mines
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Tongyu Zhao
National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder
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Junling Long
University of Colorado, Boulder
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Mustafa Bal
National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder, Fermilab, Superconducting Quantum Materials and Systems Center (SQMS), Fermilab