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Stabilization of Kerr-cat qubits with quantum circuit refrigerator

Shumpei Masuda, Shunsuke Kamimura, Tsuyoshi Yamamoto, Takaaki Aoki, A. Tomonaga·June 20, 2024·DOI: 10.1038/s41534-025-00974-6
Physics

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Abstract

A periodically driven superconducting nonlinear resonator can implement a Kerr-cat qubit, which provides a promising route to a quantum computer with a long lifetime. However, the system is vulnerable to pure dephasing, which causes unwanted excitations outside the qubit subspace. Therefore, we require a refrigeration technology that confines the system in the qubit subspace. We theoretically study on-chip refrigeration for Kerr-cat qubits based on photon-assisted electron tunneling at tunneling junctions, called quantum circuit refrigerators (QCR). Rates of QCR-induced deexcitations of the system can be changed by more than four orders of magnitude by tuning a bias voltage across the tunneling junctions. Unwanted QCR-induced bit flips are greatly suppressed due to quantum interference in the tunneling process, and thus the long lifetime is preserved. The QCR can serve as a tunable dissipation source that stabilizes Kerr-cat qubits.

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