Efficient Control of a Transmon Qudit Using Effective Spin-7/2 Rotations

Qudits hold great promise for efficient quantum computation and the simulation of high-dimensional quantum systems [1]. However, existing control and measurement schemes for qudit systems scale unfavorably with qudit dimension since they decompose SU(d) operations into series of qubitlike rotations...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Elizabeth Champion, Zihao Wang, Rayleigh W. Parker, Machiel S. Blok
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2025-06-01
Series:Physical Review X
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/vbh4-lysv
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Summary:Qudits hold great promise for efficient quantum computation and the simulation of high-dimensional quantum systems [1]. However, existing control and measurement schemes for qudit systems scale unfavorably with qudit dimension since they decompose SU(d) operations into series of qubitlike rotations and perform measurements on a small number of states [2–6]. Here, we address these challenges by employing simultaneous multifrequency drives to generate rotations and projections in an effective spin-7/2 system mapped onto the energy eigenstates of a superconducting circuit. We implement single-shot readout of the eight states using a multitone dispersive readout (F_{assignment}=88.3%) and exploit the strong nonlinearity in a high-E_{J}/E_{C} transmon to simultaneously address each transition and realize a spin displacement operator. Combining this displacement operator with a virtual SNAP gate, we realize arbitrary single-qudit unitary operations in O(d) physical pulses and extract spin displacement gate fidelities ranging from 0.997 to 0.989 for virtual spins of size j=1 to j=7/2. We demonstrate the potential of our control scheme in three ways: the direct measurement of the spin qudit Wigner function, randomized benchmarking of a logical qubit encoded into the qudit state, and randomized benchmarking of the full qudit Clifford group. In the latter experiment, we implement the d-dimensional quantum Fourier transform with an average gate fidelity of 0.91(6) in d=8. Our multifrequency approach to qudit control and measurement can be readily extended to other physical platforms that realize a multilevel system coupled to a cavity and can become a building block for efficient qudit-based quantum computation and simulation.
ISSN:2160-3308