Revisiting the multi-mode rhombus circuit as a biased-noise qubit
Abstract
In this work, we revisit the idea of using an interferometer of pairs of Josephson junctions as a protected rhombus qubit. Unlike in the original proposal, where the qubit states are encoded into odd and even parity charge states, here, we intentionally alter the energy of one of the junctions to investigate the soft version of the rhombus qubit. This approach allows us to directly probe the qubit transitions over several GHz and reduce the potential drawbacks of the interferometer-based protect...
Description / Details
In this work, we revisit the idea of using an interferometer of pairs of Josephson junctions as a protected rhombus qubit. Unlike in the original proposal, where the qubit states are encoded into odd and even parity charge states, here, we intentionally alter the energy of one of the junctions to investigate the soft version of the rhombus qubit. This approach allows us to directly probe the qubit transitions over several GHz and reduce the potential drawbacks of the interferometer-based protection. Away from a half flux quantum external field, the large shunting capacitors of the circuit ensure localized qubit states in different phase valleys, leading to a biased-noise qubit. In the realized circuit, we measure an average s relaxation time in the biased-noise regime (with a Ramsey dephasing time of ns), while an average s relaxation time at frustration (with ns). Our loss analysis on this multi-mode circuit indicates that at low frequencies, flux noise and quasiparticle tunneling limit the relaxation times, pointing toward the presence of an optimal operating regime of around a few GHz.
Source: arXiv:2605.06430v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2605.06430v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2605.06430v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2605.06430v1
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May 8, 2026
Quantum Computing
Quantum Physics
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