skip to main content
Caltech

INQNET Seminar

Monday, June 14, 2021
9:30am to 10:30am
Add to Cal
Online Event
Creating Inter-Cryostat Quantum Microwave Networks across Meter-Scale Distances
Andreas Wallraff, ETH Zurich,

Join Zoom Meeting

https://caltech.zoom.us/j/93304584361
Meeting ID: 933 0458 4361

Abstract

Superconducting circuits are a strong contender for realizing quantum computing systems. Constructing such systems with many thousands, possibly millions of superconducting qubits will likely require linking several computing nodes housed in their dedicated cryogenic systems into a larger networked cluster. Such networks could operate at optical frequencies using fiber links but would require large bandwidth and high-fidelity microwave-to-optical conversion. At ETH Zurich, in a radically different approach, we have designed, realized, and tested a first quantum microwave link which allows superconducting-circuit-based quantum processors located in different systems to directly exchange quantum information [1] over distances of up to 30 meters. This link, for a quantum computer, takes the role of a network transferring data between computing nodes located in a high-performance computing data center. However, unlike its conventional counterparts, our data link is operated at ultra-low temperatures, close to the absolute zero. This allows our quantum data link to directly connect to quantum processors operating at the same temperature. Using this system, we transfer qubit states and generate entanglement on demand with high transfer and target state fidelities [1,2]. The system we have constructed is a first of its kind in the world and could play an important role in both growing the power of quantum computers in the future and allowing for fundamental quantum science experiments.

[1] P. Magnard et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 125, 260502 (2020)
[2] P. Kurpiers et al., Nature 558, 264-267 (2018)

INQNET (INtelligent Quantum NEtworks & Technologies, inqnet.caltech.edu) is a research program that aims to bring together academia, national laboratories, and industry to advance quantum science and technology and address relevant fundamental questions in physics.