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Fluxonium Molecule, Theoretical and Experimental Results

ORAL

Abstract

A huge advantage of superconducting circuits as a platform for quantum computing is the wide variety of possible circuits in which one can encode quantum information, but a majority of the effort in the field is focused on single-node circuits. One relatively-simple multi-node circuit is the fluxonium molecule, consisting of two fluxoniums with a shared superinductor. Even with the restriction of operating the circuit at working points which are first-order-insensitive to flux noise in the two loops, there are many options for a logical encoding, each with their own dominant dephasing mechanisms and possible control schemes. We present a theoretical analysis of working points, their respective logical encodings, and potential as a protected qubit, as well as our experimental results demonstrating coherent control.

Presenters

  • Jeffrey M Gertler

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

Authors

  • Jeffrey M Gertler

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Mallika T Randeria

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Kunal L Tiwari

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Junyoung An

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Kate Azar

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Michael Gingras

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Max Hays

    MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Thomas M Hazard

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Junghyun Kim

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Jeffrey M Knecht

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Bethany M Niedzielski

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Hannah M Stickler

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Helin Zhang

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Jeffrey A Grover

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT

  • Mollie E Schwartz

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • William D Oliver

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

  • Kyle Serniak

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology