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In-situ Tuning of the Electric-Dipole Strength of a Double Dot Charge Qubit: Charge Noise Protection and Ultra Strong Coupling

ORAL

Abstract

Semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) are promising building blocks for semiconductor-based quantum technology. Here, we investigate double-QD (DQD) charge qubits in GaAs, capacitively coupled to high-impedance SQUID array and Josephson junction array resonators. We tune the strength of the electric-dipole interaction between the qubit and the resonator in-situ using surface gates. We characterize the qubit-resonator coupling strength, qubit decoherence, and detuning noise affecting the charge qubit for different electrostatic DQD configurations. We find that all quantities can be tuned systematically over more than one order of magnitude, resulting in reproducible decoherence rates < 5 MHz in the limit of high inter-dot capacitance. Conversely, by reducing the inter-dot capacitance, we can increase the DQD electric-dipole strength, and therefore its coupling to the resonator. By employing a Josephson junction array resonator with an impedance of 4 kOhm and a resonance frequency of 5.6 GHz, we observe a coupling strength of 630 MHz, demonstrating the possibility to achieve the ultrastrong coupling regime (USC) for electrons hosted in a semiconductor DQD. These results are essential for further increasing the coherence of QD-based qubits and investigating USC physics in semiconducting QDs.

Publication: arXiv:2104.03045

Presenters

  • Pasquale Scarlino

    EPFL, HQC, EPFL, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne

Authors

  • Pasquale Scarlino

    EPFL, HQC, EPFL, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne

  • Jann H Ungerer

    University of Basel

  • David J Van Woerkom

    Microsoft Corp

  • Peter Stano

    RIKEN

  • Clemens Muller

    IBM Research - Zurich

  • Andreas Landig

    ETH Zurich

  • Jonne V Koski

    Microsoft Corp

  • Christian Reichl

    ETH Zurich

  • Werner Wegscheider

    ETH Zurich

  • Thomas Ihn

    ETH Zurich, ETH, Zurich

  • Klaus Ensslin

    ETH Zurich

  • Andreas Wallraff

    ETH Zurich, Department of Physics, ETH Zurich, CH-8093 Zurich, Switzerland