Superconducting microwave cavities and qubits for quantum information systems

Author:

Krasnok Alex12ORCID,Dhakal Pashupati3ORCID,Fedorov Arkady4ORCID,Frigola Pedro5ORCID,Kelly Michael6,Kutsaev Sergey5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Florida International University 1 , Miami, Florida 33174, USA

2. Knight Foundation School of Computing and Information Sciences 2 , Florida International University, Miami, Florida 33199, USA

3. Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility 3 , Newport News, Virginia 23606, USA

4. ARC Centre for Engineered Quantum System, School of Mathematics and Physics, University of Queensland 4 , Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia

5. RadiaBeam LLC 5 , Santa Monica, California 90403, USA

6. Argonne National Laboratory 6 , Lemont, Illinois 60439, USA

Abstract

Superconducting microwave cavities featuring ultrahigh Q-factors, which measure the efficiency of energy storage in relation to energy loss in a system, are revolutionizing quantum computing by providing long coherence times exceeding 1 ms, crucial for the development of scalable multi-qubit quantum systems with low error rates. In this work, we provide an in-depth analysis of recent advances in ultrahigh Q-factor cavities, integration of Josephson junction-based qubits, and bosonic-encoded qubits in 3D cavities. We examine the sources of quantum state dephasing caused by damping and noise mechanisms in cavities and qubits, highlighting the critical challenges that need to be addressed to achieve even higher coherence times. We critically survey the latest progress made in implementing single 3D qubits using superconducting materials, normal metals, and multi-qubit and multi-state quantum systems. Our work sheds light on the promising future of this research area, including novel materials for cavities and qubits, modes with nontrivial topological properties, error correction techniques for bosonic qubits, and new light–matter interaction effects.

Funder

U.S. Department of Energy

Jefferson Scholars Foundation

ARC centre of excellence for engineered Quantum Systems

Publisher

AIP Publishing

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