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Long-Range Gates in Superconducting Dual-Rail Qubits (Part 1 - Theory)

ORAL

Abstract

Superconducting systems are a promising platform for quantum information processing due to their flexibility and fast processing rates. However, these systems have traditionally been limited to nearest-neighbor qubit coupling, which prevents the efficient implementation of good quantum low-density parity-check (qLDPC) codes for quantum error correction. We present a novel superconducting architecture that enables simultaneous two-qubit gates between arbitrary pairs of dual-rail transmon (DRT) qubits coupled through a one-dimensional multi-mode coupled-resonator array bus (CRAB). The ability to perform long-range two-qubit gates across the CRAB enables the efficient implementation of good qLDPC codes with high encoding rates. We achieve this by driving the DRT pairs at specific sideband frequencies of a CRAB mode, implementing an effective Mølmer-Sørensen interaction Hamiltonian. Local control of the DRT drives and careful choice of sideband frequencies helps mitigate gate crosstalk, enabling simultaneous operation. We discuss the key technical challenges of this approach, including residual cross-Kerr interactions, bus mode decay during gates, and unwanted interactions with non-computational states. We outline a calibration procedure to address these issues and provide estimates of achievable gate speeds and fidelities. The same cross-resonance interaction can also enable high-fidelity readout of the DRT qubits without leaving the computational subspace.

Presenters

  • Or Golan

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Hebrew University of Jerusalem & AWS

Authors

  • Or Golan

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Hebrew University of Jerusalem & AWS

  • Alex Retzker

    Hebrew University of Jerusalem & AWS

  • Alexey V Gorshkov

    National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), NIST / University of Maryland, College Park, AWS Center for Quantum Computing, JQI, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) & JQI & AWS

  • Andreas Butler

    Caltech, AWS Center for Quantum Computing, Caltech

  • Gihwan Kim

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing; Caltech, Caltech, AWS Center for Quantum Computing, Caltech

  • Shahriar Aghaeimeibodi

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing, AWS

  • Matthew Matheny

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing, Amazon.com, Inc.

  • Oskar Painter

    Caltech, Caltech & AWS, AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • Fernando Brandao

    Caltech & AWS, AWS Center for Quantum Computing