High-fidelity two-qubit gates via dynamical decoupling of local 1/f noise at optimal point (1605.06231v1)
Abstract: We investigate the possibility to achieve high-fidelity universal two-qubit gates by supplementing optimal tuning of individual qubits with dynamical decoupling (DD) of local 1/f noise. We consider simultaneous local pulse sequences applied during the gate operation and compare the efficiencies of periodic, Carr-Purcell and Uhrig DD with hard $\pi$-pulses along two directions ($\pi_{z/y}$ pulses). We present analytical perturbative results (Magnus expansion) in the quasi-static noise approximation combined with numerical simulations for realistic 1/f noise spectra. The gate efficiency is studied as a function of the gate duration, of the number $n$ of pulses, and of the high-frequency roll-off. We find that the gate error is non-monotonic in $n$, decreasing as $n{-\alpha}$ in the asymptotic limit, $\alpha \geq 2$ depending on the DD sequence. In this limit $\pi_z$-Urhig is the most efficient scheme for quasi-static 1/f noise, but it is highly sensitive to the soft UV-cutoff. For small number of pulses, $\pi_z$ control yields anti-Zeno behavior, whereas $\pi_y$ pulses minimize the error for a finite $n$. For the current noise figures in superconducting qubits, two-qubit gate errors $\sim 10{-6}$, meeting the requirements for fault-tolerant quantum computation, can be achieved. The Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill sequence is the most efficient procedure, stable for $1/f$ noise with UV-cutoff up to gigahertz.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.