Measurement of a superconducting qubit with a microwave photon counter

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Abstract

Fast, high-fidelity measurement is a key ingredient for quantum error correction. Conventional approaches to the measurement of superconducting qubits, involving linear amplification of a microwave probe tone followed by heterodyne detection at room temperature, do not scale well to large system sizes. We introduce an approach to measurement based on a microwave photon counter demonstrating raw single-shot measurement fidelity of 92%. Moreover, the intrinsic damping of the photon counter is used to extract the energy released by the measurement process, allowing repeated high-fidelity quantum nondemolition measurements. Our scheme provides access to the classical outcome of projective quantum measurement at the millikelvin stage and could form the basis for a scalable quantum-to-classical interface.

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Opremcak, A., Pechenezhskiy, I. V., Howington, C., Christensen, B. G., Beck, M. A., Leonard, E., … McDermott, R. (2018). Measurement of a superconducting qubit with a microwave photon counter. Science, 361(6408), 1239–1242. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aat4625

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