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Hardware-Efficient Stabilization of Entanglement via Engineered Dissipation in Superconducting Circuits
arXiv
Authors: Changling Chen, Kai Tang, Yuxuan Zhou, KangYuan Yi, Xuan Zhang, Xu Zhang, Haosheng Guo, Song Liu, Yuanzhen Chen, Tongxing Yan, Dapeng Yu
Year
2024
Paper ID
65247
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
191
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Generation and preservation of quantum entanglement are among the primary tasks in quantum information processing. State stabilization via quantum bath engineering offers a resource-efficient approach to achieve this objective. However, current methods for engineering dissipative channels to stabilize target entangled states often require specialized hardware designs, complicating experimental realization and hindering their compatibility with scalable quantum computation architectures. In this work, we propose and experimentally demonstrate a stabilization protocol readily implementable in the mainstream integrated superconducting quantum circuits. The approach utilizes a Raman process involving a resonant (or nearly resonant) superconducting qubit array and their dedicated readout resonators to effectively emerge nonlocal dissipative channels. Leveraging individual controllability of the qubits and resonators, the protocol stabilizes two-qubit Bell states with a fidelity of 90.7\%, marking the highest reported value in solid-state platforms to date. Furthermore, by extending this strategy to include three qubits, an entangled W state is achieved with a fidelity of 86.2\%, which has not been experimentally investigated before. Notably, the protocol is of practical interest since it only utilizes existing hardware common to standard operations in the underlying superconducting circuits, thereby facilitating the exploration of many-body quantum entanglement with dissipative resources.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum Foundations research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2024 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Generation and preservation of quantum entanglement are among the primary tasks in quantum information processing.
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