Adaptive real-time operations in small spin qubit arrays
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
Gate-controlled spin qubits offer tunability and programmable operation by voltage signals. Maturing devices from simple single- and two-qubit geometries to arrays of interconnected quantum dots poses challenges that arise for example from cross coupling and gate-offset drifts, necessitating efficient and autonomous operations in the high-dimensional control parameter space associated with qubit arrays.
I will present selected examples from our work encompassing multi-dot devices implemented in silicon structures and gallium-arsenide heterostructures, including active-learning algorithms that autonomously explore the charge stability diagram of capacitively coupled quantum dot arrays and spin rotations via real-time estimation of uncontrolled qubit parameters. These techniques will be important not only for the maturing of high-fidelity spin qubit devices via automated high-throughput device characterization, but also for the stabilization of operating parameters of quantum processors against environmental fluctuations.
I will present selected examples from our work encompassing multi-dot devices implemented in silicon structures and gallium-arsenide heterostructures, including active-learning algorithms that autonomously explore the charge stability diagram of capacitively coupled quantum dot arrays and spin rotations via real-time estimation of uncontrolled qubit parameters. These techniques will be important not only for the maturing of high-fidelity spin qubit devices via automated high-throughput device characterization, but also for the stabilization of operating parameters of quantum processors against environmental fluctuations.
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Presenters
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Ferdinand Kuemmeth
Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen. Quantum Machines, QDevil, Niels Bohr Inst
Authors
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Ferdinand Kuemmeth
Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen. Quantum Machines, QDevil, Niels Bohr Inst