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Superconducting Qubits
Cryogenic Microwave Filter Cavity with a Tunability Greater than 5 GHz
arXiv
Authors: T. J. Clark, V. Vadakkumbatt, F. Souris, H. Ramp, J. P Davis
Year
2018
Paper ID
24221
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
164
Citations
N/A
Abstract
A wide variety of applications of microwave cavities, such as measurement and control of superconducting qubits, magnonic resonators, and phase noise filters, would be well served by having a highly tunable microwave resonance. Often this tunability is desired in situ at low temperatures, where one can take advantage of superconducting cavities. To date, such cryogenic tuning while maintaining a high quality factor has been limited to sim500 MHz. Here we demonstrate a three-dimensional superconducting microwave cavity that shares one wall with a pressurized volume of helium. Upon pressurization of the helium chamber the microwave cavity is deformed, which results in in situ tuning of its resonant frequency by more than 5 GHz, greater than 60% of the original 8 GHz resonant frequency. The quality factor of the cavity remains approximately constant at approx7times 103 over the entire range of tuning. As a demonstration of its usefulness, we implement a tunable cryogenic phase noise filter, which reduces the phase noise of our source by approximately 10 dB above 400 kHz.
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- This paper contributes to the Superconducting Qubits research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- A wide variety of applications of microwave cavities, such as measurement and control of superconducting qubits, magnonic resonators, and phase noise filters, would be well...
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