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Measurement of a superconducting qubit with a microwave photon counter

A. Opremcak, I. Pechenezhskiy, C. Howington, Bradley G. Christensen, Matthew Beck, E. Leonard, J. Suttle, C. Wilen, Konstantin Nesterov, G. Ribeill, T. Thorbeck, F. Schlenker, M. Vavilov, B. Plourde, Robert McDermott·March 2, 2018·DOI: 10.1126/science.aat4625
MedicinePhysics

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Abstract

Counting the state of a qubit Operation of a quantum computer will be reliant on the ability to correct errors. This will typically require the fast, high-fidelity quantum nondemolition measurement of a large number of qubits. Opremcak et al. describe a method that uses a photon counter to determine the state of a superconducting qubit. Being able to simply read out the qubit state as a photon number removes the need for bulky components and large experimental overhead that characterizes present approaches. Science, this issue p. 1239 A microwave photon counter is used to determine the state of a superconducting qubit. Fast, high-fidelity measurement is a key ingredient for quantum error correction. Conventional approaches to the measurement of superconducting qubits, involving linear amplification of a microwave probe tone followed by heterodyne detection at room temperature, do not scale well to large system sizes. We introduce an approach to measurement based on a microwave photon counter demonstrating raw single-shot measurement fidelity of 92%. Moreover, the intrinsic damping of the photon counter is used to extract the energy released by the measurement process, allowing repeated high-fidelity quantum nondemolition measurements. Our scheme provides access to the classical outcome of projective quantum measurement at the millikelvin stage and could form the basis for a scalable quantum-to-classical interface.

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