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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing Superconducting Qubits

Loss tangent fluctuations due to two-level systems in superconducting microwave resonators

arXiv
Authors: André Vallières, Megan E. Russell, Xinyuan You, David A. Garcia-Wetten, Dominic P. Goronzy, Mitchell J. Walker, Michael J. Bedzyk, Mark C. Hersam, Alexander Romanenko, Yao Lu, Anna Grassellino, Jens Koch, Corey Rae H. McRa

Year

2024

Paper ID

6271

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

188

Citations

N/A

Abstract

Superconducting microwave resonators are critical to quantum computing and sensing technologies. Additionally, they are common proxies for superconducting qubits when determining the effects of performance-limiting loss mechanisms such as from two-level systems (TLS). The extraction of these loss mechanisms is often performed by measuring the internal quality factor Qi as a function of power or temperature. In this work, we investigate large temporal fluctuations of Qi at low powers over periods of 12 to 16 hours relative standard deviation $σQi/Qi = 13\%$. These fluctuations are ubiquitous across multiple resonators, chips and cooldowns. We are able to attribute these fluctuations to variations in the TLS loss tangent due to two main indicators. First, measured fluctuations decrease as power and temperature increase. Second, for interleaved measurements, we observe correlations between low- and medium-power Qi fluctuations and an absence of correlations with high-power fluctuations. Agreement with the TLS loss tangent mean is obtained by performing measurements over a time span of a few hours. We hypothesize that, in addition to decoherence due to coupling to individual near-resonant TLS, superconducting qubits are affected by these observed TLS loss tangent fluctuations.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Superconducting Qubits research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2024 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • Superconducting microwave resonators are critical to quantum computing and sensing technologies.

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