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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing Superconducting Qubits

Deterministic Quantum Communication Between Fixed-Frequency Superconducting Qubits via Broadband Resonators

arXiv
Authors: Takeaki Miyamura, Zhiling Wang, Kohei Matsuura, Yoshiki Sunada, Keika Sunada, Kenshi Yuki, Jesper Ilves, Yasunobu Nakamura

Year

2025

Paper ID

15976

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

178

Citations

0

Abstract

Quantum communication between remote chips is essential for realizing large-scale superconducting quantum computers. For such communication, itinerant microwave photons propagating through transmission lines offer a promising approach. However, demonstrations to date have relied on frequency-tunable circuit elements to compensate for fabrication-related parameter variations between sender and receiver devices, introducing control complexity and limiting scalability. In this work, we demonstrate deterministic quantum state transfer and remote entanglement generation between fixed-frequency superconducting qubits on separate chips. To compensate for the sender-receiver mismatch, we employ a frequency-tunable photon-generation technique which enables us to adjust the photon frequency without modifying circuit parameters. To enhance the frequency tunability, we implement broadband transfer resonators composed of two coupled coplanar-waveguide resonators, achieving a bandwidth of more than 100 MHz. This broadband design enables successful quantum communication across a 30-MHz range of photon frequencies between the remote qubits. Quantum process tomography reveals state transfer fidelities of around 78% and Bell-state fidelities of around 73% across the full frequency range. Our approach avoids the complexity of the control lines and noise channels, providing a flexible pathway toward scalable quantum networks.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Superconducting Qubits research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2025 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • Quantum communication between remote chips is essential for realizing large-scale superconducting quantum computers.

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