Engineering fast high-fidelity quantum operations with constrained interactions

Abstract Understanding how to tailor quantum dynamics to achieve the desired evolution is a crucial problem in almost all quantum technologies. Oftentimes an otherwise ideal quantum dynamics is corrupted by unavoidable interactions, and finding ways to mitigate the unwanted effects of such interacti...

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Main Authors: T. Figueiredo Roque, Aashish A. Clerk, Hugo Ribeiro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-02-01
Series:npj Quantum Information
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41534-020-00349-z
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spelling doaj-27efe0889e694f5eac7e9555b84105522021-02-14T12:48:31ZengNature Publishing Groupnpj Quantum Information2056-63872021-02-017111710.1038/s41534-020-00349-zEngineering fast high-fidelity quantum operations with constrained interactionsT. Figueiredo Roque0Aashish A. Clerk1Hugo Ribeiro2Max Planck Institute for the Science of LightPritzker School of Molecular Engineering, University of ChicagoMax Planck Institute for the Science of LightAbstract Understanding how to tailor quantum dynamics to achieve the desired evolution is a crucial problem in almost all quantum technologies. Oftentimes an otherwise ideal quantum dynamics is corrupted by unavoidable interactions, and finding ways to mitigate the unwanted effects of such interactions on the dynamics is a very active field of research. Here, we present a very general method for designing high-efficiency control sequences that are fully compatible with experimental constraints on available interactions and their tunability. Our approach relies on the Magnus expansion to find order by order the necessary corrections that result in a high-fidelity operation. In the end finding, the control fields are reduced to solve a set of linear equations. We illustrate our method by applying it to a number of physically relevant problems: the strong-driving limit of a two-level system, fast squeezing in a parametrically driven cavity, the leakage problem in transmon qubit gates, and the acceleration of SNAP gates in a qubit-cavity system.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41534-020-00349-z
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author T. Figueiredo Roque
Aashish A. Clerk
Hugo Ribeiro
spellingShingle T. Figueiredo Roque
Aashish A. Clerk
Hugo Ribeiro
Engineering fast high-fidelity quantum operations with constrained interactions
npj Quantum Information
author_facet T. Figueiredo Roque
Aashish A. Clerk
Hugo Ribeiro
author_sort T. Figueiredo Roque
title Engineering fast high-fidelity quantum operations with constrained interactions
title_short Engineering fast high-fidelity quantum operations with constrained interactions
title_full Engineering fast high-fidelity quantum operations with constrained interactions
title_fullStr Engineering fast high-fidelity quantum operations with constrained interactions
title_full_unstemmed Engineering fast high-fidelity quantum operations with constrained interactions
title_sort engineering fast high-fidelity quantum operations with constrained interactions
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series npj Quantum Information
issn 2056-6387
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Understanding how to tailor quantum dynamics to achieve the desired evolution is a crucial problem in almost all quantum technologies. Oftentimes an otherwise ideal quantum dynamics is corrupted by unavoidable interactions, and finding ways to mitigate the unwanted effects of such interactions on the dynamics is a very active field of research. Here, we present a very general method for designing high-efficiency control sequences that are fully compatible with experimental constraints on available interactions and their tunability. Our approach relies on the Magnus expansion to find order by order the necessary corrections that result in a high-fidelity operation. In the end finding, the control fields are reduced to solve a set of linear equations. We illustrate our method by applying it to a number of physically relevant problems: the strong-driving limit of a two-level system, fast squeezing in a parametrically driven cavity, the leakage problem in transmon qubit gates, and the acceleration of SNAP gates in a qubit-cavity system.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41534-020-00349-z
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