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      Nonadiabatic Holonomic Quantum Computation with Dressed-State Qubits

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          Superconducting circuits for quantum information: an outlook.

          The performance of superconducting qubits has improved by several orders of magnitude in the past decade. These circuits benefit from the robustness of superconductivity and the Josephson effect, and at present they have not encountered any hard physical limits. However, building an error-corrected information processor with many such qubits will require solving specific architecture problems that constitute a new field of research. For the first time, physicists will have to master quantum error correction to design and operate complex active systems that are dissipative in nature, yet remain coherent indefinitely. We offer a view on some directions for the field and speculate on its future.
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            Charge insensitive qubit design derived from the Cooper pair box

            Short dephasing times pose one of the main challenges in realizing a quantum computer. Different approaches have been devised to cure this problem for superconducting qubits, a prime example being the operation of such devices at optimal working points, so-called "sweet spots." This latter approach led to significant improvement of \(T_2\) times in Cooper pair box qubits [D. Vion et al., Science 296, 886 (2002)]. Here, we introduce a new type of superconducting qubit called the "transmon." Unlike the charge qubit, the transmon is designed to operate in a regime of significantly increased ratio of Josephson energy and charging energy \(E_J/E_C\). The transmon benefits from the fact that its charge dispersion decreases exponentially with \(E_J/E_C\), while its loss in anharmonicity is described by a weak power law. As a result, we predict a drastic reduction in sensitivity to charge noise relative to the Cooper pair box and an increase in the qubit-photon coupling, while maintaining sufficient anharmonicity for selective qubit control. Our detailed analysis of the full system shows that this gain is not compromised by increased noise in other known channels.
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              Atomic physics and quantum optics using superconducting circuits

              Superconducting circuits based on Josephson junctions exhibit macroscopic quantum coherence and can behave like artificial atoms. Recent technological advances have made it possible to implement atomic-physics and quantum-optics experiments on a chip using these artificial atoms. This review presents a brief overview of the progress achieved so far in this rapidly advancing field. We not only discuss phenomena analogous to those in atomic physics and quantum optics with natural atoms, but also highlight those not occurring in natural atoms. In addition, we summarize several prospective directions in this emerging interdisciplinary field.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                PRAHB2
                Physical Review Applied
                Phys. Rev. Applied
                American Physical Society (APS)
                2331-7019
                May 2017
                May 26 2017
                : 7
                : 5
                Article
                10.1103/PhysRevApplied.7.054022
                1252ce60-e0b8-4e39-96c1-ae363b8c0d1e
                © 2017

                http://link.aps.org/licenses/aps-default-license

                http://link.aps.org/licenses/aps-default-accepted-manuscript-license

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