Skip to main content

21. Jun 2021

Correcting decoherence errors in quantum superconducting circuits

Datum: 21. June 2021 | 16:00 – 17:00
Sprecher: Michel Devoret, Yale University
Veranstaltungsort: Online

image here

 

The accuracy of logical operations on quantum bits (qubits) must be improved for quantum computers to surpass classical ones in useful tasks. To that effect, quantum information must be robust to noise that affects the underlying physical system. Rather than suppressing noise, quantum error correction  aims at preventing it from causing logical errors. This approach derives from the reasonable assumption that noise is local: it does not act in a coordinated way on different parts of the physical system. Therefore, if a logical qubit is encoded non-locally, it is possible, during a limited time,  to detect and correct noise-induced evolution before it corrupts the encoded information. We will discuss how recent experiments [1, 2] based on superconducting cavities and transmon artificial atoms – employed here as ancillary non-linear elements – realize this error correction, and its  prospect for reservoir engineering implementations that would realize the desirable next stage: autonomous quantum error correction.

[1] Grimm et al. , Nature, 584, 205–209 (2020); [2] Campagne-Ibarcq et al., Nature, 584, 368-372 (2020).

Weitere Informationen:

Datum:
21. June 2021
16:00 – 17:00

Sprecher:
Michel Devoret, Yale University

Veranstaltungsort:
Online

Ansprechpartner:

Arinya Eller

Email:
arinya.eller@ist.ac.at

Teilen

facebook share icon
twitter share icon



sidebar arrow up
Nach Oben