Dephasing in Fluxonium Qubits from Coherent Quantum Phase Slips

Author:

Randeria Mallika T.12ORCID,Hazard Thomas M.12ORCID,Di Paolo Agustin2ORCID,Azar Kate12ORCID,Hays Max2ORCID,Ding Leon22ORCID,An Junyoung22ORCID,Gingras Michael12ORCID,Niedzielski Bethany M.12ORCID,Stickler Hannah12,Grover Jeffrey A.2ORCID,Yoder Jonilyn L.12,Schwartz Mollie E.12ORCID,Oliver William D.222ORCID,Serniak Kyle122ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Lincoln Laboratory

2. Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Abstract

Phase slips occur across all Josephson junctions (JJs) at a rate that increases with the impedance of the junction. In superconducting qubits composed of JJ-array superinductors—such as fluxonium—phase slips in the array can lead to decoherence. In particular, phase-slip processes at the individual array junctions can coherently interfere, each with an Aharonov-Casher phase that depends on the offset charges of the array islands. These coherent quantum phase slips (CQPS) perturbatively modify the qubit frequency, and therefore charge noise on the array islands will lead to dephasing. By varying the impedance of the array junctions, we design a set of fluxonium qubits in which the expected phase-slip rate within the JJ array changes by several orders of magnitude. We characterize the coherence times of these qubits and demonstrate that the scaling of CQPS-induced dephasing rates agrees with our theoretical model. Furthermore, we perform noise spectroscopy of two qubits in regimes dominated by either CQPS or flux noise. We find that the noise power spectrum associated with CQPS dephasing appears to be featureless at low frequencies and not 1/f. Numerical simulations indicate that this behavior is consistent with charge noise generated by charge-parity fluctuations within the array. Our findings broadly inform JJ-array-design trade-offs, relevant for the numerous superconducting-qubit designs employing JJ-array superinductors. Published by the American Physical Society 2024

Funder

Air Force

Korea Foundation for Advances Studies

Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education

IBM Ph.D. Fellowship

Publisher

American Physical Society (APS)

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