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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing Superconducting Qubits

High-speed calibration and characterization of superconducting quantum processors without qubit reset

arXiv
Authors: Max Werninghaus, Daniel Egger, Stefan Filipp

Year

2020

Paper ID

19985

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

227

Citations

N/A

Abstract

To Characterize and calibrate quantum processing devices a large amount of measurement data has to be collected. Active qubit reset increases the speed at which data can be gathered but requires additional hardware and/or calibration. The experimental apparatus can, however, be operated at elevated repetition rates without reset. In this case, the outcome of a first measurement serves as the initial state for the next experiment. Rol. textit{et al.} used this restless operation mode to accelerate the calibration of a single-qubit gate by measuring fixed-length sequences of Clifford gates which compose to X gates [Phys. Rev. Appl. 7, 041001 (2017)]. However, we find that, when measuring pulse sequences which compose to arbitrary operations, a distortion appears in the measured data. Here, we extend the restless methodology by showing how to efficiently analyze restless measurements and correct distortions to achieve an identical outcome and accuracy as compared to measurements in which the superconducting qubits are reset. This allows us to rapidly characterize and calibrate qubits. We illustrate our data collection and analysis method by measuring a Rabi oscillation at a 250 rm{kHz} repetition rate without any reset, for a qubit with a decay rate of 1/2πT1=3 rm{kHz}. We also show that we can measure a single- and a two-qubit average gate fidelity with Randomized Benchmarking 20 and 8 times faster, respectively, than measurements that reset the qubits through T1-decay.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Superconducting Qubits research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2020 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • To Characterize and calibrate quantum processing devices a large amount of measurement data has to be collected.

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