Nature Communications (May 2024)

Mechanically induced correlated errors on superconducting qubits with relaxation times exceeding 0.4 ms

  • Shingo Kono,
  • Jiahe Pan,
  • Mahdi Chegnizadeh,
  • Xuxin Wang,
  • Amir Youssefi,
  • Marco Scigliuzzo,
  • Tobias J. Kippenberg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-48230-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Superconducting qubits are among the most advanced candidates for achieving fault-tolerant quantum computing. Despite recent significant advancements in the qubit lifetimes, the origin of the loss mechanism for state-of-the-art qubits is still subject to investigation. Furthermore, the successful implementation of quantum error correction requires negligible correlated errors between qubits. Here, we realize long-lived superconducting transmon qubits that exhibit fluctuating lifetimes, averaging 0.2 ms and exceeding 0.4 ms – corresponding to quality factors above 5 million and 10 million, respectively. We then investigate their dominant error mechanism. By introducing novel time-resolved error measurements that are synchronized with the operation of the pulse tube cooler in a dilution refrigerator, we find that mechanical vibrations from the pulse tube induce nonequilibrium dynamics in highly coherent qubits, leading to their correlated bit-flip errors. Our findings not only deepen our understanding of the qubit error mechanisms but also provide valuable insights into potential error-mitigation strategies for achieving fault tolerance by decoupling superconducting qubits from their mechanical environments.