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Optical readout of superconducting qubits using piezo-optomechanical transducers

ORAL

Abstract

Superconducting quantum processors have made significant progress in size and computing potential. As a result, the practical cryogenic limitations of operating large numbers of superconducting qubits are becoming a bottleneck for further scaling. Due to the low thermal conductivity and the dense optical multiplexing capacity of telecommunications fiber, converting qubit signal processing to the optical domain using microwave-to-optics transduction would significantly relax the strain on cryogenic space and thermal budgets. Here, we demonstrate optical readout of a superconducting transmon qubit connected via a coaxial cable to a fiber-coupled piezo-optomechanical transducer. Using a demolition readout technique, we achieve a single shot readout fidelity of 81%. We further demonstrate that the optical pump has minimal impact on qubit decoherence times. With further improvement to our transducer and by leveraging the modular fiber-based nature and small footprint of this device platform, we envision all-optical dispersive qubit readout of thousands of qubits in parallel.

Publication: arXiv:2310.06026

Presenters

  • Thierry C van Thiel

    QphoX

Authors

  • Thierry C van Thiel

    QphoX

  • Matthew Weaver

    Qphox, Delft University of Technology

  • Federico Berto

    QphoX

  • Pim Duivestein

    Qphox

  • Mathilde Lemang

    QphoX

  • Kiki Louise Schuurman

    Qphox

  • Martin Zemlicka

    QphoX

  • Frederick Hijazi

    QphoX

  • Alexandra C Bernasconi

    Qphox

  • Cristobal Ferrer

    QphoX

  • Eugenio Cataldo

    QphoX

  • Ella O Lachman

    Rigetti Computing

  • Mark Field

    Rigetti Computing

  • Yuvraj Mohan

    Rigetti

  • Fokko de Vries

    Qblox

  • Cornelis C Bultink

    QBlox, Qblox, Qblox B.V.

  • Jules van Oven

    QBlox

  • Josh Y Mutus

    Rigetti Computing

  • Robert Stockill

    QphoX

  • Simon Groeblacher

    QphoX