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Readout of a quantum processor with high dynamic range Josephson parametric amplifiers

Authors :
Theodore White
Alex Opremcak
George Sterling
Alexander Korotkov
Daniel Sank
Rajeev Acharya
Markus Ansmann
Frank Arute
Kunal Arya
Joseph C. Bardin
Andreas Bengtsson
Alexandre Bourassa
Jenna Bovaird
Leon Brill
Bob B. Buckley
David A. Buell
Tim Burger
Brian Burkett
Nicholas Bushnell
Zijun Chen
Ben Chiaro
Josh Cogan
Roberto Collins
Alexander L. Crook
Ben Curtin
Sean Demura
Andrew Dunsworth
Catherine Erickson
Reza Fatemi
Leslie Flores Burgos
Ebrahim Forati
Brooks Foxen
William Giang
Marissa Giustina
Alejandro Grajales Dau
Michael C. Hamilton
Sean D. Harrington
Jeremy Hilton
Markus Hoffmann
Sabrina Hong
Trent Huang
Ashley Huff
Justin Iveland
Evan Jeffrey
Mária Kieferová
Seon Kim
Paul V. Klimov
Fedor Kostritsa
John Mark Kreikebaum
David Landhuis
Pavel Laptev
Lily Laws
Kenny Lee
Brian J. Lester
Alexander Lill
Wayne Liu
Aditya Locharla
Erik Lucero
Trevor McCourt
Matt McEwen
Xiao Mi
Kevin C. Miao
Shirin Montazeri
Alexis Morvan
Matthew Neeley
Charles Neill
Ani Nersisyan
Jiun How Ng
Anthony Nguyen
Murray Nguyen
Rebecca Potter
Chris Quintana
Pedram Roushan
Kannan Sankaragomathi
Kevin J. Satzinger
Christopher Schuster
Michael J. Shearn
Aaron Shorter
Vladimir Shvarts
Jindra Skruzny
W. Clarke Smith
Marco Szalay
Alfredo Torres
Bryan W. K. Woo
Z. Jamie Yao
Ping Yeh
Juhwan Yoo
Grayson Young
Ningfeng Zhu
Nicholas Zobrist
Yu Chen
Anthony Megrant
Julian Kelly
Ofer Naaman
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We demonstrate a high dynamic range Josephson parametric amplifier (JPA) in which the active nonlinear element is implemented using an array of rf-SQUIDs. The device is matched to the 50 $\Omega$ environment with a Klopfenstein-taper impedance transformer and achieves a bandwidth of 250-300 MHz, with input saturation powers up to -95 dBm at 20 dB gain. A 54-qubit Sycamore processor was used to benchmark these devices, providing a calibration for readout power, an estimate of amplifier added noise, and a platform for comparison against standard impedance matched parametric amplifiers with a single dc-SQUID. We find that the high power rf-SQUID array design has no adverse effect on system noise, readout fidelity, or qubit dephasing, and we estimate an upper bound on amplifier added noise at 1.6 times the quantum limit. Lastly, amplifiers with this design show no degradation in readout fidelity due to gain compression, which can occur in multi-tone multiplexed readout with traditional JPAs.<br />Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7e07240ba2fe7a867a743edf6d33e659