Publications by authors named "G Catelani"

A known source of decoherence in superconducting qubits is the presence of broken Cooper pairs, or quasiparticles. These can be generated by high-energy radiation, either present in the environment or purposefully introduced, as in the case of some hybrid quantum devices. Here, we systematically study the properties of a transmon qubit under illumination by focused infrared radiation with various powers, durations, and spatial locations.

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Article Synopsis
  • Large-scale superconducting quantum processors face challenges due to the complex microscopic features in solid-state devices, primarily using aluminium oxide (AlO) tunnel Josephson junctions for nonlinearity in quantum operations.
  • Traditional analyses often rely on an ideal sinusoidal current-phase relation, which only applies in very low-transparency conditions, but new findings reveal this doesn’t accurately represent the energy spectra of transmon artificial atoms.
  • A mesoscopic model shows significant contributions from higher Josephson harmonics, improving predictions of energy spectra and suggesting that engineered harmonics could minimize charge-related errors in transmon qubits, enhancing their performance for quantum technologies.
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Identifying, quantifying, and suppressing decoherence mechanisms in qubits are important steps towards the goal of engineering a quantum computer or simulator. Superconducting circuits offer flexibility in qubit design; however, their performance is adversely affected by quasiparticles (broken Cooper pairs). Developing a quasiparticle mitigation strategy compatible with scalable, high-coherence devices is therefore highly desirable.

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As quantum coherence times of superconducting circuits have increased from nanoseconds to hundreds of microseconds, they are currently one of the leading platforms for quantum information processing. However, coherence needs to further improve by orders of magnitude to reduce the prohibitive hardware overhead of current error correction schemes. Reaching this goal hinges on reducing the density of broken Cooper pairs, so-called quasiparticles.

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We evaluate the rates of energy and phase relaxation of a superconducting qubit caused by stray photons with energy exceeding the threshold for breaking a Cooper pair. All channels of relaxation within this mechanism are associated with the change in the charge parity of the qubit, enabling the separation of the photon-assisted processes from other contributions to the relaxation rates. Among the signatures of the new mechanism is the same order of rates of the transitions in which a qubit loses or gains energy, which is in agreement with recent experiments.

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