Stable CNOT-gate on inductively-coupled fluxoniums with over 99.9% fidelity – part 2
ORAL
Abstract
In this part of the talk, we discuss the realization of a 60 ns direct CNOT gate on two inductively-coupled fluxonium qubits over 99.9% fidelity [1]. Fluxonium qubit is a promising elementary building block for quantum information processing due to its long coherence time combined with a strong anharmonicity. In this paper, we realize a 60 ns direct CNOT-gate on two inductively-coupled fluxoniums, which behave almost exactly as a pair of transversely-coupled spin-1/2 systems [2]. The CNOT-gate fidelity, estimated using randomized benchmarking, was as high as 99.94%. Furthermore, the fidelity remains above 99.9% for 24 days without any recalibration between measurements. Compared with the 99.96% fidelity of a 60 ns identity gate, our data brings the investigation of the non-decoherence-related errors during logical operations down to 2×10-4. The present result adds a simple and robust two-qubit gate into the still relatively small family of the “beyond three nines” gates on superconducting qubits.
[1] Lin, Wei-Ju, et al. "24 days-stable CNOT-gate on fluxonium qubits with over 99.9% fidelity." arXiv preprint arXiv:2407.15783 (2024).
[2] Lin, Wei-Ju, et al. "Verifying the analogy between transversely coupled spin-1/2 systems and inductively-coupled fluxoniums." arXiv preprint arXiv:2407.15450 (2024).
[1] Lin, Wei-Ju, et al. "24 days-stable CNOT-gate on fluxonium qubits with over 99.9% fidelity." arXiv preprint arXiv:2407.15783 (2024).
[2] Lin, Wei-Ju, et al. "Verifying the analogy between transversely coupled spin-1/2 systems and inductively-coupled fluxoniums." arXiv preprint arXiv:2407.15450 (2024).
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Publication: Lin, Wei-Ju, et al. "24 days-stable CNOT-gate on fluxonium qubits with over 99.9% fidelity." arXiv preprint arXiv:2407.15783 (2024).
Presenters
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Wei-Ju Lin
University of Maryland College Park
Authors
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Wei-Ju Lin
University of Maryland College Park
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Hyunheung Cho
University of Maryland College Park
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Yinqi Chen
Louisiana State University
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Kasra Sardashti
Laboratory for Physical Sciences (LPS)
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Maxim G Vavilov
University of Wisconsin - Madison
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Chen Wang
University of Massachusetts Amherst, UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS AMHERST
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Vladimir E Manucharyan
Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, Federal Institute of Technology (EPFL), EPFL