MQV Colloquium: Zaki Leghtas


The MQV Colloquia feature interdisciplinary talks given by local as well as invited international experts. The colloquia, which are accessible to a worldwide audience via videoconference, cover all aspects of quantum technologies, with a focus on MQV research activities. The goal of the series is to establish and strengthen connections with quantum-technology experts worldwide and to provide a platform for education and scientific exchange for and with the local quantum ecosystem.


"Quantum control of a cat-qubit with bit-flip times exceeding ten seconds"

Zaki Leghtas

Abstract

Quantum bits (qubits) are prone to several types of errors due to uncontrolled interactions with their environment. Common strategies to correct these errors are based on architectures of qubits involving daunting hardware overheads. A hopeful path forward is to build qubits that are inherently protected against certain types of errors, so that the overhead required to correct remaining ones is significantly reduced. However, the foreseen benefit rests on a severe condition: quantum manipulations of the qubit must not break the protection that has been so carefully engineered. A recent qubit – the cat-qubit – is encoded in the manifold of metastable states of a quantum dynamical system, thereby acquiring continuous and autonomous protection against bit-flips. Here, in a superconducting circuit experiment, we implement a cat-qubit with bit-flip times exceeding 10 seconds. This is a four order of magnitude improvement over previous cat-qubit implementations. We prepare and image quantum superposition states, and measure phase-flip times above 490 nanoseconds. Most importantly, we control the phase of these quantum superpositions without breaking bit-flip protection. This experiment demonstrates the compatibility of quantum control and inherent bit-flip protection at an unprecedented level, showing the viability of these dynamical qubits for future quantum technologies.

References:

  • Nature volume 629, pages 778–783 (2024)
  • Nature Physics volume 16, pages 509–513 (2020)
  • Science volume 347, Issue 6224, pages 853-857 (2015)

Short bio

tbd

Note

This time around, the colloquium will in parallel take place in person at the WMI.


Please join our online colloquium series via Zoom at:
https://eu01web.zoom.us/j/64158654884?pwd=VUZSczcrSXJuaEJzbmJwamN4V0Nvdz09
Meeting ID: 641 5865 4884, Passcode: 823197