Superconducting tetrahedral quantum bits
Abstract
We propose a new design for a quantum bit with four superconducting islands in the topology of a symmetric tetrahedron, uniformly frustrated with one-half flux-quantum per loop and one-half Cooper-pair per island. This structure emulates a noise-resistant spin-1/2 system in a vanishing magnetic field. The tetrahedral quantum bit combines a number of advances such as a doubly degeneracy ground state minimizing decoherence via phonon radiation, a weak quadratic sensitivity to electric and magnetic noise, relieved constraints on the junction fabrication, a large freedom in manipulation, and attractive measurement schemes. The simultaneous appearance of a degenerate ground state and a weak noise sensitivity are consequences of the tetrahedral symmetry, while enhanced quantum fluctuations derive from the special magnetic frustration. We determine the spectral properties of the tetrahedral structure within a semiclassical analysis and confirm the results numerically. We show how proper tuning of the charge-frustration selects a doubly degenerate ground state and discuss the qubit's manipulation through capacitive and inductive coupling to external bias sources. The complete readout of all the spin-components is achieved through coupling of the internal qubit currents to external junctions driven close to criticality during the measurement.
Cite
@article{arxiv.cond-mat/0407663,
title = {Superconducting tetrahedral quantum bits},
author = {M. V. Feigel'man and L. B. Ioffe and V. B. Geshkenbein and P. Dayal and G. Blatter},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:cond-mat/0407663},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
16 pages, 7 figures