| Literature DB >> 31719588 |
Jaewoo Joo1,2, Chang-Woo Lee3,4, Shingo Kono5, Jaewan Kim3.
Abstract
We propose a new scheme of measurement-based quantum computation (MBQC) using an error-correcting code against photon-loss in circuit quantum electrodynamics. We describe a specific protocol of logical single-qubit gates given by sequential cavity measurements for logical MBQC and a generalised Schrödinger cat state is used for a continuous-variable (CV) logical qubit captured in a microwave cavity. To apply an error-correcting scheme on the logical qubit, we utilise a d-dimensional quantum system called a qudit. It is assumed that a three CV-qudit entangled state is initially prepared in three jointed cavities and the microwave qudit states are individually controlled, operated, and measured through a readout resonator coupled with an ancillary superconducting qubit. We then examine a practical approach of how to create the CV-qudit cluster state via a cross-Kerr interaction induced by intermediary superconducting qubits between neighbouring cavities under the Jaynes-Cummings Hamiltonian. This approach could be scalable for building 2D logical cluster states and therefore will pave a new pathway of logical MBQC in superconducting circuits toward fault-tolerant quantum computing.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31719588 PMCID: PMC6851091 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-52866-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematics of logical MBQC in a circuit-QED architecture. (Left) Three cavities (A, B, C) have the intersected superconducting qubits M1 and M2 used for inducing the Kerr interactions between cavities. When a 3-qudit logical cluster state is built in the cavities by cross-Ker interaction (K), logical MBQC is performed by a sequential measurement of each cavity. The colours of transmons energy states represent the anharmonicity of the energy levels in a transmon. (Right) the tunability of Kerr effects between the neighbouring cavities provided with the help of tunable on-site superconducting qubits and an extra (tunable) intermediary qubit in the same architecture (the details are shown in[29,64]). For example, the self-Kerr effects can be only reduced by shifting energy levels in on-site qubits at point (a) and the simultaneous entangling gates are performed by cross-Kerr K between (a,b). From (b) to (c), the cavities are uncoupled and the sequential measurements of each cavity are performed for MBQC.
Table for measurement outcomes in A and C and the performed logical single-qubit gates ( and ).
| Outcome | Logical gate | Outcome | Logical gate |
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Table for outcomes and performed gates in Section 4.5 .
| Outcome state in | Single-qubit operations |
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Figure 2(Top) |〈a〉|, |〈a〉| and are depicted in blue, orange and green lines, respectively. The cavity state evolves from the initial state |α〉|α〉 (α = 2.0) under the generalised JC Hamiltonian in Eq. (1). The parameters of the Hamiltonian are ω = 5.5 GHz, ω = 8.5 GHz, ω = 4.0 GHz, λ = 0.12 GHz, λ = 0.15 GHz and K = −0.6 GHz. While |〈a〉| shows the revival of mode B at τ ≈ 160 μs, is nearly 0 and shows that the superconducting qubit is the ground state |g〉 mostly as predicted in the adiabatic method. (Bottom) In (a), a mixture of four coherent states is given by at t0 = 39.45 μs (≈τ/4) while the Wigner plot in (b) indicates that the evolved state is also very close to the state |04〉 with F ≈ 0.978. From (c) to (f), we project the state on the Fock states from |0〉〈0| to |3〉〈3| and the Wigner plots of are shown as coherent states in (k = 0, 1, 2, 3).