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Qubit Coherence Noise Stability Characterization Superconducting Qubits

Systematic Characterization of Transmon Qubit Stability with Thermal Cycling

arXiv
Authors: Cong Li, Zhaohua Yang, Xinfang Zhang, Zhihao Wu, Shichuan Xue, Mingtang Deng

Year

2026

Paper ID

2703

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

191

Citations

N/A

Abstract

The temporal stability and reproducibility of qubit parameters are critical for the long-term operation and maintenance of superconducting quantum processors. In this work, we present a comprehensive longitudinal characterization of 27 frequency-tunable transmon qubits spanning over one year across four thermal cycles. Our results establish a distinct hierarchy of stability for superconducting hardware. We find that the intrinsic device parameters determining the qubit frequency and the baseline energy relaxation times $T1$ exhibit high robustness against thermal stress, characterized by frequency deviations typically confined within 0.5% and non-degraded coherence baselines. In stark contrast, the environmental variables, specifically the background magnetic flux offsets and the microscopic landscape of two-level system (TLS) defects, undergo a significant stochastic reconfiguration after each cycle. By employing frequency-dependent relaxation spectroscopy and a quantitative metric, the T1 Spectral Topography Fidelity, we demonstrate that thermal cycling acts as a "hard reset" for the local defect environment. This process introduces a level of spectral randomization equivalent to thousands of hours of continuous low-temperature evolution. These findings confirm that while the fabrication quality is preserved, the specific noise realization is statistically distinct for each thermal cycle, necessitating automated recalibration strategies for large-scale quantum systems.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Superconducting Qubits research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2026 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • The temporal stability and reproducibility of qubit parameters are critical for the long-term operation and maintenance of superconducting quantum processors.

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