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Superconducting Qubits
Controlled Parity of Cooper Pair Tunneling in a Hybrid Superconducting Qubit
arXiv
Authors: David Feldstein-Bofill, Leo Uhre Jacobsen, Ksenia Shagalov, Zhenhai Sun, Casper Wied, Shikhar Singh, Anders Kringhøj, Jacob Hastrup, András Gyenis, Karsten Flensberg, Svend Krøjer, Morten Kjaergaard
Year
2026
Paper ID
3707
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
197
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Superconducting quantum circuits derive their nonlinearity from the Josephson energy-phase relation. Besides the fundamental cosφ term, this relation can also contain higher Fourier harmonics cos(kφ) corresponding to correlated tunneling of k Cooper pairs. The parity of the dominant tunneling process, i.e. whether an odd or even number of Cooper pairs tunnel, results in qualitatively different properties, and controlling this opens up a wide range of applications in superconducting technology. However, access to even-dominated regimes has remained challenging and has so far relied on complex multi-junction or all-hybrid architectures. Here, we demonstrate a simple "harmonic parity qubit" (HPQ); an element that combines two aluminum-oxide tunnel junctions in parallel to a gate-tunable InAs/Al nanowire junction forming a SQUID, and use spectroscopy versus flux to reconstruct its energy-phase relation at 85 gate voltage points. At half flux quantum, the odd harmonics of the Josephson potential can be suppressed by up to two orders of magnitude relative to the even harmonics, producing a double-well potential dominated by even harmonics with minima near pmπ/2. The ability to control harmonic parity enables supercurrent carried by pairs of Cooper pairs and provides a new building block for Fourier engineering in superconducting circuits.
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.
- Superconducting quantum circuits derive their nonlinearity from the Josephson energy-phase relation.
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