Applied Physics Letters, volume 119, issue 14, pages 144002

Protocol for temperature sensing using a three-level transmon circuit

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2021-10-04
scimago Q1
SJR0.976
CiteScore6.4
Impact factor3.5
ISSN00036951, 10773118
Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)
Abstract
We present a method for in situ temperature measurement of superconducting quantum circuits, by using the first three levels of a transmon device to which we apply a sequence of π gates. Our approach employs projective dispersive readout and utilizes the basic properties of the density matrix associated with thermal states. This method works with an averaging readout scheme and does not require a single-shot readout setup. We validate this protocol by performing thermometry in the range of 50 mK 200 mK, corresponding to a range of residual populations 1%− 20% for the first excited state and 0.02%− 3% for the second excited state. Superconducting qubits are one of the most promising candidates as the basic element of future quantum computers. The progress of the last decade has resulted in a significant increase of their coherence times to tens of microseconds, in a reduction of errors caused by interaction with the environment through the implementation of reset protocols and error-correction protocols, and in an enhancement in readout fidelity up to 99.6%. However, the exact mechanisms that limits further improvements in superconducting qubit systems are still not fully understood; one possibility is the spurious excitations caused by microwave noise, infrared radiation from hotter stages of the dilution refrigerators or poisoning by quasiparticles. To mitigate these effects, a range of experimental techniques have been deployed – the use of cryogenic filters and attenuators, infrared absorbers, radiation and magnetic shielding of samples, with the goal of reducing the temperature of the electromagnetic environment and the quasiparticle population. Here we introduce a protocol for evaluating the effective temperature of a superconducting qubit. Our method can be readily used as a diagnostic tool for qubit thermalization and line integrity in quantum computing applications. An important application is quantum thermodynamics, where controlling the effective temperature of the circuit can be used to drive quantum engines. The state of the electromagnetic environment of the qubit is described by an effective temperature, which characterizes the thermal equilibrium between the qubit and the environment and thus defines residual populations of former. There are several ways to estimate this effective temperature from the residual populations of qubit’s states, assuming a MaxwellBoltzmann distribution. A straightforward method is to use a single-shot readout. In this case the residual probabilities can be directly calculated from measurement statistics, provided that the states can be discriminated with sufficiently good precision. However, the implementation of a single-shot readout scheme requires a good quantum limited parametric ampliElectronic mail: sorin.paraoanu@aalto.fi fier and additional components. An alternative approach, which does not use single-shot readout, is based on the measurement of correlations between responses corresponding to the ground and excited states. Another technique uses a three level system, where the Rabi oscillation amplitude between the first and the second excited state depends on the residual population of the first excited state. However, this method is highly sensitive to the readout signal parameters. Finally, a thermometry technique for propagating waves in open-waveguides can be used to characterize the temperature of the electromagnetic field, but this method requires a dedicated sample design. Here we propose an in situ method for measuring the effective temperature, which utilizes only π pulses and requires measuring only the average responses in the dispersive readout limit. Therefore this method could be implemented without a specialized setup or sophisticated measurement techniques. In addition, determining the temperature does not rely on qubit state tomography: In our protocol, we measure the cavity responses after applying six different drive sequences that swap the populations of the three-level system, in our case defined by the first levels in a transmon device. A simple linear relationship is found between some of these responses, and the coefficient of proportionality is determined only by the thermal level occupations. Therefore, as the method does not rely on full state tomography or on the knowledge of the pure state responses, it is more resilient to noise and drifts which are commonly present in superconducting artificial atom experiments. Moreover, since only π pulses are utilized, the proposed method is robust against dephasing and, if the pulses are much shorter with respect to the relaxation time, also against decay. Consider a three-level system in thermal equilibrium with its environment at a temperature T . The density matrix reads ρ̂ = pg |g〉 〈 g|+ pe |e〉 〈e| + p f | f 〉 〈 f | , (1) where |g〉 , |e〉 , | f 〉 are respectively the ground, the first excited and the second excited state, with corresponding populations pg, pe, and p f . Thermal equilibrium means that ρ̂
Cattaneo M., Paraoanu G.S.
Advanced Quantum Technologies scimago Q1 wos Q2
2021-09-24 citations by CoLab: 23 Abstract  
The importance of dissipation engineering ranges from universal quantum computation to non‐equilibrium quantum thermodynamics. In recent years, more and more theoretical and experimental studies have shown the relevance of this topic for circuit quantum electrodynamics, one of the major platforms in the race for a quantum computer. This article discusses how to simulate thermal baths by inserting resistive elements in networks of superconducting qubits. Apart from pedagogically reviewing the phenomenological and microscopic models of a resistor as thermal bath with Johnson–Nyquist noise, the paper introduces some new results in the weak coupling limit, showing that the most common examples of open quantum systems can be simulated through capacitively coupled superconducting qubits and resistors. The aim of the manuscript, written with a broad audience in mind, is to be both an instructive tutorial about how to derive and characterize the Hamiltonian of general dissipative superconducting circuits with capacitive coupling, and a review of the most relevant and topical theoretical and experimental works focused on resistive elements and dissipation engineering.
McRae C.R., Stiehl G.M., Wang H., Lin S., Caldwell S.A., Pappas D.P., Mutus J., Combes J.
Applied Physics Letters scimago Q1 wos Q2
2021-09-06 citations by CoLab: 10 Abstract  
Superconducting Quantum Devices Corey Rae H. McRae,1, 2, 3, a) Gregory M. Stiehl,4 Haozhi Wang,5 Sheng-Xiang Lin,1, 2, 3 Shane A. Caldwell,4 David P. Pappas,2 Josh Mutus,4 and Joshua Combes6 1)Department of Physics, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309, USA 2)National Institute of Standards and Technology, Boulder, Colorado 80305, USA 3)Boulder Cryogenic Quantum Testbed, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309, USA 4)Rigetti Computing, Berkeley, California 94710, USA 5)Laboratory for Physical Sciences, University of Maryland College Park, College Park, MD 20740, USA 6)Department of Electrical, Computer, and Energy Engineering, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309, USA
Hamedani Raja S., Maniscalco S., Paraoanu G.S., Pekola J.P., Lo Gullo N.
New Journal of Physics scimago Q1 wos Q2 Open Access
2021-03-01 citations by CoLab: 33 PDF Abstract  
Abstract We study the thermodynamic performance of a finite-time non-regenerative quantum Stirling-like cycle used as a heat engine. We consider specifically the case in which the working substance (WS) is a two-level system (TLS). The Stirling cycle is made of two isochoric transformations separated by a compression and an expansion stroke during which the WS is in contact with a thermal reservoir. To describe these two strokes we derive a non-Markovian master equation which allows to study the real-time dynamics of a driven open quantum system with arbitrary fast driving. Following the real-time dynamics of the WS using this master equation, the endpoints of the isotherms can deviate from the equilibrium thermal states. The role of this deviation in the performance of the heat engine is addressed. We found that the finite-time dynamics and thermodynamics of the cycle depend non-trivially on the different time scales at play. In particular, driving the WS at a time scale comparable to the resonance time of the bath enhances the performance of the cycle and allows for an efficiency higher than the efficiency of the quasistatic cycle, but still below the Carnot bound. However, by adding thermalization of the WS with the baths at the end of compression/expansion processes one recovers the conventional scenario in which efficiency decreases by speeding up the processes. In addition, the performance of the cycle is dependent on the compression/expansion speeds asymmetrically, which suggests new freedom in optimizing quantum heat engines. The maximum output power and the maximum efficiency are obtained almost simultaneously when the real-time endpoints of the compression/expansion processes are considered instead of the equilibrium thermal endpoint states. However, the net extractable work always declines by speeding up the drive.
Scigliuzzo M., Bengtsson A., Besse J., Wallraff A., Delsing P., Gasparinetti S.
Physical Review X scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2020-12-17 citations by CoLab: 25 PDF Abstract  
The ability to control and measure the temperature of propagating microwave modes down to very low temperatures is indispensable for quantum information processing, and may open opportunities for studies of heat transport at the nanoscale, also in the quantum regime. Here we propose and experimentally demonstrate primary thermometry of propagating microwaves using a transmon-type superconducting circuit. Our device operates continuously, with a sensitivity down to $4\times 10^{-4}$ photons/$\sqrt{\mbox{Hz}}$ and a bandwidth of 40 MHz. We measure the thermal occupation of the modes of a highly attenuated coaxial cable in a range of 0.001 to 0.4 thermal photons, corresponding to a temperature range from 35 mK to 210 mK at a frequency around 5 GHz. To increase the radiation temperature in a controlled fashion, we either inject calibrated, wideband digital noise, or heat the device and its environment. This thermometry scheme can find applications in benchmarking and characterization of cryogenic microwave setups, temperature measurements in hybrid quantum systems, and quantum thermodynamics.
Campagne-Ibarcq P., Eickbusch A., Touzard S., Zalys-Geller E., Frattini N.E., Sivak V.V., Reinhold P., Puri S., Shankar S., Schoelkopf R.J., Frunzio L., Mirrahimi M., Devoret M.H.
Nature scimago Q1 wos Q1
2020-08-19 citations by CoLab: 318 Abstract  
The accuracy of logical operations on quantum bits (qubits) must be improved for quantum computers to outperform classical ones in useful tasks. One method to achieve this is quantum error correction (QEC), which prevents noise in the underlying system from causing logical errors. This approach derives from the reasonable assumption that noise is local, that is, it does not act in a coordinated way on different parts of the physical system. Therefore, if a logical qubit is encoded non-locally, we can—for a limited time—detect and correct noise-induced evolution before it corrupts the encoded information1. In 2001, Gottesman, Kitaev and Preskill (GKP) proposed a hardware-efficient instance of such a non-local qubit: a superposition of position eigenstates that forms grid states of a single oscillator2. However, the implementation of measurements that reveal this noise-induced evolution of the oscillator while preserving the encoded information3–7 has proved to be experimentally challenging, and the only realization reported so far relied on post-selection8,9, which is incompatible with QEC. Here we experimentally prepare square and hexagonal GKP code states through a feedback protocol that incorporates non-destructive measurements that are implemented with a superconducting microwave cavity having the role of the oscillator. We demonstrate QEC of an encoded qubit with suppression of all logical errors, in quantitative agreement with a theoretical estimate based on the measured imperfections of the experiment. Our protocol is applicable to other continuous-variable systems and, in contrast to previous implementations of QEC10–14, can mitigate all logical errors generated by a wide variety of noise processes and facilitate fault-tolerant quantum computation. Quantum error correction of Gottesman–Kitaev–Preskill code states is realized experimentally in a superconducting quantum device.
Kulikov A., Navarathna R., Fedorov A.
Physical Review Letters scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2020-06-15 citations by CoLab: 13 Abstract  
Initialization of a qubit in a pure state is a prerequisite for quantum computer operation. A plethora of ways to achieve this has been proposed in the last decade, from active reset protocols to advances in materials and shielding. An instrumental tool to evaluate those methods and develop new ones is the ability to measure the population of excited states with high precision and in a short period of time. In this Letter, we propose a new technique of finding the excited state population of a qubit using correlations between two sequential measurements. We experimentally implement the proposed technique using a circuit QED platform and compare its performance with previously developed ones. Unlike other techniques, our method does not require high-fidelity readout and does not involve the excited levels of the system outside of the qubit subspace. We experimentally demonstrated measurement of the spurious qubit population with accuracy of up to 0.01%. This accuracy enabled us to perform "temperature spectroscopy" of the qubit, which helps to shed light on decoherence sources.
Schlör S., Lisenfeld J., Müller C., Bilmes A., Schneider A., Pappas D.P., Ustinov A.V., Weides M.
Physical Review Letters scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2019-11-08 citations by CoLab: 132 Abstract  
We report on long-term measurements of a highly coherent, nontunable superconducting transmon qubit, revealing low-frequency burst noise in coherence times and qubit transition frequency. We achieve this through a simultaneous measurement of the qubit's relaxation and dephasing rate as well as its resonance frequency. The analysis of correlations between these parameters yields information about the microscopic origin of the intrinsic decoherence mechanisms in Josephson qubits. Our results are consistent with a small number of microscopic two-level systems located at the edges of the superconducting film, which is further confirmed by a spectral noise analysis.
Burnett J.J., Bengtsson A., Scigliuzzo M., Niepce D., Kudra M., Delsing P., Bylander J.
npj Quantum Information scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2019-06-26 citations by CoLab: 231 PDF Abstract  
We benchmark the decoherence of superconducting transmon qubits to examine the temporal stability of energy relaxation, dephasing, and qubit transition frequency. By collecting statistics during measurements spanning multiple days, we find the mean parameters $$\overline {T_1}$$  = 49 μs and $$\overline {T_2^ \ast }$$  = 95 μs; however, both of these quantities fluctuate, explaining the need for frequent re-calibration in qubit setups. Our main finding is that fluctuations in qubit relaxation are local to the qubit and are caused by instabilities of near-resonant two-level-systems (TLS). Through statistical analysis, we determine sub-millihertz switching rates of these TLS and observe the coherent coupling between an individual TLS and a transmon qubit. Finally, we find evidence that the qubit’s frequency stability produces a 0.8 ms limit on the pure dephasing which we also observe. These findings raise the need for performing qubit metrology to examine the reproducibility of qubit parameters, where these fluctuations could affect qubit gate fidelity.
Krinner S., Storz S., Kurpiers P., Magnard P., Heinsoo J., Keller R., Lütolf J., Eichler C., Wallraff A.
EPJ Quantum Technology scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2019-05-28 citations by CoLab: 216 PDF Abstract  
A robust cryogenic infrastructure in form of a wired, thermally optimized dilution refrigerator is essential for solid-state based quantum processors. Here, we engineer a cryogenic setup, which minimizes passive and active heat loads, while guaranteeing rapid qubit control and readout. We review design criteria for qubit drive lines, flux lines, and output lines used in typical experiments with superconducting circuits and describe each type of line in detail. The passive heat load of stainless steel and NbTi coaxial cables and the active load due to signal dissipation are measured, validating our robust and extensible concept for thermal anchoring of attenuators, cables, and other microwave components. Our results are important for managing the heat budget of future large-scale quantum computers based on superconducting circuits.
Serniak K., Hays M., de Lange G., Diamond S., Shankar S., Burkhart L. ., Frunzio L., Houzet M., Devoret M. .
Physical Review Letters scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2018-10-10 citations by CoLab: 146 Abstract  
Non-equilibrium quasiparticle excitations degrade the performance of a variety of superconducting circuits. Understanding the energy distribution of these quasiparticles will yield insight into their generation mechanisms, the limitations they impose on superconducting devices, and how to efficiently mitigate quasiparticle-induced qubit decoherence. To probe this energy distribution, we systematically correlate qubit relaxation and excitation with charge-parity switches in an offset-charge-sensitive transmon qubit, and find that quasiparticle-induced excitation events are the dominant mechanism behind the residual excited-state population in our samples. By itself, the observed quasiparticle distribution would limit $T_1$ to $\approx200~\mu\mathrm{s}$, which indicates that quasiparticle loss in our devices is on equal footing with all other loss mechanisms. Furthermore, the measured rate of quasiparticle-induced excitation events is greater than that of relaxation events, which signifies that the quasiparticles are more energetic than would be predicted from a thermal distribution describing their apparent density.
Egger D.J., Werninghaus M., Ganzhorn M., Salis G., Fuhrer A., Müller P., Filipp S.
Physical Review Applied scimago Q1 wos Q2
2018-10-10 citations by CoLab: 60 Abstract  
Improving coherence times of quantum bits is a fundamental challenge in the field of quantum computing. With long-lived qubits it becomes, however, inefficient to wait until the qubits have relaxed to their ground state after completion of an experiment. Moreover, for error-correction schemes it is import to rapidly re-initialize ancilla parity-check qubits. We present a simple pulsed qubit reset protocol based on a two-pulse sequence. A first pulse transfers the excited state population to a higher excited qubit state and a second pulse into a lossy environment provided by a low-Q transmission line resonator, which is also used for qubit readout. We show that the remaining excited state population can be suppressed to $2.2\pm0.8\%$ and utilize the pulsed reset protocol to carry out experiments at enhanced rates.
Grünhaupt L., Maleeva N., Skacel S.T., Calvo M., Levy-Bertrand F., Ustinov A.V., Rotzinger H., Monfardini A., Catelani G., Pop I.M.
Physical Review Letters scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2018-09-11 citations by CoLab: 135 Abstract  
Superconducting high kinetic inductance elements constitute a valuable resource for quantum circuit design and millimeter-wave detection. Granular aluminum (GrAl) in the superconducting regime is a particularly interesting material since it has already shown a kinetic inductance in the range of nH$/\Box$ and its deposition is compatible with conventional Al/AlOx/Al Josephson junction fabrication. We characterize microwave resonators fabricated from GrAl with a room temperature resistivity of $4 \times 10^3\,\mu\Omega\cdot$cm, which is a factor of 3 below the superconductor to insulator transition, showing a kinetic inductance fraction close to unity. The measured internal quality factors are on the order of $Q_{\mathrm{i}} = 10^5$ in the single photon regime, and we demonstrate that non-equilibrium quasiparticles (QP) constitute the dominant loss mechanism. We extract QP relaxation times in the range of 1 s and we observe QP bursts every $\sim 20$ s. The current level of coherence of GrAl resonators makes them attractive for integration in quantum devices, while it also evidences the need to reduce the density of non-equilibrium QPs.
Magnard P., Kurpiers P., Royer B., Walter T., Besse J.-., Gasparinetti S., Pechal M., Heinsoo J., Storz S., Blais A., Wallraff A.
Physical Review Letters scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2018-08-07 citations by CoLab: 131 Abstract  
Active qubit reset is a key operation in many quantum algorithms, and particularly in error correction codes. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a reset scheme of a three level transmon artificial atom coupled to a large bandwidth resonator. The reset protocol uses a microwave-induced interaction between the $|f,0\rangle$ and $|g,1\rangle$ states of the coupled transmon-resonator system, with $|g\rangle$ and $|f\rangle$ denoting the ground and second excited states of the transmon, and $|0\rangle$ and $|1\rangle$ the photon Fock states of the resonator. We characterize the reset process and demonstrate reinitialization of the transmon-resonator system to its ground state with $0.2\%$ residual excitation in less than $500 \, \rm{ns}$. Our protocol is of practical interest as it has no requirements on the architecture, beyond those for fast and efficient single-shot readout of the transmon, and does not require feedback.
Tuorila J., Partanen M., Ala-Nissila T., Möttönen M.
npj Quantum Information scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2017-07-14 citations by CoLab: 35 PDF Abstract  
We propose an efficient qubit initialization protocol based on a dissipative environment that can be dynamically adjusted. Here, the qubit is coupled to a thermal bath through a tunable harmonic oscillator. On-demand initialization is achieved by sweeping the oscillator rapidly into resonance with the qubit. This resonant coupling with the engineered environment induces fast relaxation to the ground state of the system, and a consecutive rapid sweep back to off resonance guarantees weak excess dissipation during quantum computations. We solve the corresponding quantum dynamics using a Markovian master equation for the reduced density operator of the qubit-bath system. This allows us to optimize the parameters and the initialization protocol for the qubit. Our analytical calculations show that the ground-state occupation of our system is well protected during the fast sweeps of the environmental coupling and, consequently, we obtain an estimate for the duration of our protocol by solving the transition rates between the low-energy eigenstates with the Jacobian diagonalization method. Our results suggest that the current experimental state of the art for the initialization speed of superconducting qubits at a given fidelity can be considerably improved. The ability to accurately reset qubits is one of the fundamental criteria in implementing quantum computers. Jani Tuorila and co-workers from Aalto University (Finland) propose a qubit initialization protocol using a dynamically adjustable environment. The scheme differs from the conventional methods which reach for a given qubit state with microwave cooling or projective measurements of the qubit. The protocol relies on enhancing the dissipation to the qubit ground state by tuning an engineered environment on resonance with the qubit. The new theoretical study suggests that the experimental benchmark for the initialization speed at a given precision can be increased with this method almost by an order of magnitude. Such an improvement would present a significant step towards meeting the stringent operational conditions of a working largescale quantum computer.
Silveri M.P., Tuorila J.A., Thuneberg E.V., Paraoanu G.S.
Reports on Progress in Physics scimago Q1 wos Q1
2017-04-05 citations by CoLab: 130 Abstract  
We review the physical phenomena that arise when quantum mechanical energy levels are modulated in time. The dynamics resulting from changes in the transition frequency is a problem studied since the early days of quantum mechanics. It has been of constant interest both experimentally and theoretically since, with the simple two-state model providing an inexhaustible source of novel concepts. When the transition frequency of a quantum system is modulated, several phenomena can be observed, such as Landau-Zener-Stückelberg-Majorana interference, motional averaging and narrowing, and the formation of dressed states with the appearance of sidebands in the spectrum. Adiabatic changes result in the accumulation of geometric phases, which can be used to create topological states. In recent years, an exquisite experimental control in the time domain was gained through the parameters entering the Hamiltonian, and high-fidelity readout schemes allowed the state of the system to be monitored non-destructively. These developments were made in the field of quantum devices, especially in superconducting qubits, as a well as in atomic physics, in particular in ultracold gases. As a result of these advances, it became possible to demonstrate many of the fundamental effects that arise in a quantum system when its transition frequencies are modulated. The purpose of this review is to present some of these developments, from two-state atoms and harmonic oscillators to multilevel and many-particle systems.
Krause J., Marchegiani G., Janssen L.M., Catelani G., Ando Y., Dickel C.
Physical Review Applied scimago Q1 wos Q2
2024-10-24 citations by CoLab: 3
McRae C.R., Ramirez J., Acharya M., Pitten J., Lindström T., Bennett D.
2024-07-08 citations by CoLab: 0
Frazão G., Pezzutto M., Omar Y., Zambrini Cruzeiro E., Gherardini S.
Entropy scimago Q2 wos Q2 Open Access
2024-06-30 citations by CoLab: 0 PDF Abstract  
The metrological limits of thermometry operated in nonequilibrium dynamical regimes are analyzed. We consider a finite-dimensional quantum system, employed as a quantum thermometer, in contact with a thermal bath inducing Markovian thermalization dynamics. The quantum thermometer is initialized in a generic quantum state, possibly including quantum coherence with respect to the Hamiltonian basis. We prove that the precision of the thermometer, quantified by the Quantum Fisher Information, is enhanced by the quantum coherence in its initial state. We analytically show this in the specific case of qubit thermometers for which the maximization of the Quantum Fisher Information occurs at a finite time during the transient thermalization dynamics. Such a finite-time precision enhancement can be better than the precision that is achieved asymptotically.
Lemziakov S.A., Karimi B., Nakamura S., Lvov D.S., Upadhyay R., Satrya C.D., Chen Z.-., Subero D., Chang Y.-., Wang L.B., Pekola J.P.
2024-05-22 citations by CoLab: 2 Abstract  
AbstractThe importance and non-trivial properties of superconductor normal metal interfaces were discovered by Alexander Fyodorovich Andreev more than 60 years ago. Only much later, these hybrids have found wide interest in applications such as thermometry and refrigeration, electrical metrology, and quantum circuit engineering. Here we discuss the central properties of such interfaces and describe some of the most prominent and recent applications of them.
Kuzmanović M., Björkman I., McCord J.J., Dogra S., Paraoanu G.S.
Physical Review Research scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2024-02-21 citations by CoLab: 2 PDF Abstract  
We present a set of robust and high-fidelity pulses that realize paradigmatic operations such as the transfer of the ground state population into the excited state and arbitrary $X/Y$ rotations on the Bloch sphere. These pulses are based on the phase modulation of the control field. We provide an experimental proof-of-concept of these operations by using a transmon qubit, demonstrating resilience against deviations in the drive amplitude of more than $\ensuremath{\approx}20%$, and/or detuning from the qubit transition frequency in the order of $10\phantom{\rule{4pt}{0ex}}\mathrm{MHz}$. This modulation scheme is straightforward to implement in practice and can be deployed to any other qubit-based experimental platform.
McCord J.J., Dogra S., Paraoanu G.S.
Physical Review Research scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2023-07-07 citations by CoLab: 1 PDF Abstract  
Quantum physics allows an object to be detected even in the absence of photon absorption, by the use of so-called interaction-free measurements. We provide a formulation of this protocol using a three-level system, where the object to be detected is a pulse coupled resonantly into the second transition. In the original formulation of interaction-free measurements, the absorption is associated with a projection operator onto the third state. We perform an in-depth analytical and numerical analysis of the coherent protocol, where coherent interaction between the object and the detector replaces the projective operators, resulting in higher detection efficiencies. We provide approximate asymptotic analytical results to support this finding. We find that our protocol reaches the Heisenberg limit when evaluating the Fisher information at small strengths of the pulses we aim to detect---in contrast to the projective protocol that can only reach the standard quantum limit. We also demonstrate that the coherent protocol remains remarkably robust under errors such as pulse rotation phases and strengths, the effect of relaxation rates and detunings, as well as different thermalized initial states.
Lucas M., Danilov A.V., Levitin L.V., Jayaraman A., Casey A.J., Faoro L., Tzalenchuk A.Y., Kubatkin S.E., Saunders J., de Graaf S.E.
Nature Communications scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2023-06-14 citations by CoLab: 13 PDF Abstract  
AbstractQuantum circuits interact with the environment via several temperature-dependent degrees of freedom. Multiple experiments to-date have shown that most properties of superconducting devices appear to plateau out at T ≈ 50 mK – far above the refrigerator base temperature. This is for example reflected in the thermal state population of qubits, in excess numbers of quasiparticles, and polarisation of surface spins – factors contributing to reduced coherence. We demonstrate how to remove this thermal constraint by operating a circuit immersed in liquid 3He. This allows to efficiently cool the decohering environment of a superconducting resonator, and we see a continuous change in measured physical quantities down to previously unexplored sub-mK temperatures. The 3He acts as a heat sink which increases the energy relaxation rate of the quantum bath coupled to the circuit a thousand times, yet the suppressed bath does not introduce additional circuit losses or noise. Such quantum bath suppression can reduce decoherence in quantum circuits and opens a route for both thermal and coherence management in quantum processors.
Casariego M., Zambrini Cruzeiro E., Gherardini S., Gonzalez Raya T., André R., Frazão G., Catto G., Möttönen M., Datta D., Viisanen K., Govenius J., Prunnila M., Tuominen K., Reichert M., Renger M., et. al.
Quantum Science and Technology scimago Q1 wos Q1
2023-03-28 citations by CoLab: 22 Abstract  
Abstract The field of propagating quantum microwaves is a relatively new area of research that is receiving increased attention due to its promising technological applications, both in communication and sensing. While formally similar to quantum optics, some key elements required by the aim of having a controllable quantum microwave interface are still on an early stage of development. Here, we argue where and why a fully operative toolbox for propagating quantum microwaves will be needed, pointing to novel directions of research along the way: from microwave quantum key distribution to quantum radar, bath-system learning, or direct dark matter detection. The article therefore functions both as a review of the state-of-the-art, and as an illustration of the wide reach of applications the future of quantum microwaves will open.
Dogra S., McCord J.J., Paraoanu G.S.
Nature Communications scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2022-12-07 citations by CoLab: 6 PDF Abstract  
AbstractThe interaction-free measurement is a fundamental quantum effect whereby the presence of a photosensitive object is determined without irreversible photon absorption. Here we propose the concept of coherent interaction-free detection and demonstrate it experimentally using a three-level superconducting transmon circuit. In contrast to standard interaction-free measurement setups, where the dynamics involves a series of projection operations, our protocol employs a fully coherent evolution that results, surprisingly, in a higher probability of success. We show that it is possible to ascertain the presence of a microwave pulse resonant with the second transition of the transmon, while at the same time avoid exciting the device onto the third level. Experimentally, this is done by using a series of Ramsey microwave pulses coupled into the first transition and monitoring the ground-state population.

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