Cryogenic Control Architecture for Large-Scale Quantum Computing
Abstract
Solid-state qubits have recently advanced to the level that enables them, in-principle, to be scaled-up into fault-tolerant quantum computers. As these physical qubits continue to advance, meeting the challenge of realising a quantum machine will also require the engineering of new classical hardware and control architectures with complexity far beyond the systems used in today's few-qubit experiments. Here, we report a micro-architecture for controlling and reading out qubits during the execution of a quantum algorithm such as an error correcting code. We demonstrate the basic principles of this architecture in a configuration that distributes components of the control system across different temperature stages of a dilution refrigerator, as determined by the available cooling power. The combined setup includes a cryogenic field-programmable gate array (FPGA) controlling a switching matrix at 20 millikelvin which, in turn, manipulates a semiconductor qubit.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1409.2202,
title = {Cryogenic Control Architecture for Large-Scale Quantum Computing},
author = {J. M. Hornibrook and J. I. Colless and I. D. Conway Lamb and S. J. Pauka and H. Lu and A. C. Gossard and J. D. Watson and G. C. Gardner and S. Fallahi and M. J. Manfra and D. J. Reilly},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1409.2202},
year = {2015}
}
Comments
8 pages, 6 figures