鱿鱼
凝聚态物理
超导电性
磁场
约瑟夫森效应
物理
量子位元
Transmon公司
拓扑(电路)
量子
量子力学
电气工程
生态学
生物
工程类
作者
Jonas Krause,Christian Dickel,E. Vaal,M. Vielmetter,Junya Feng,R. Bounds,Gianluigi Catelani,J. M. Fink,Yoichi Ando
标识
DOI:10.1103/physrevapplied.17.034032
摘要
Magnetic-field-resilient superconducting circuits enable sensing applications and hybrid quantum computing architectures involving spin or topological qubits and electromechanical elements, as well as studying flux noise and quasiparticle loss. We investigate the effect of in-plane magnetic fields up to 1 T on the spectrum and coherence times of thin-film three-dimensional aluminum transmons. Using a copper cavity, unaffected by strong magnetic fields, we can probe solely the effect of magnetic fields on the transmons. We present data on a single-junction and a superconducting-quantum-interference-device (SQUID) transmon that are cooled down in the same cavity. As expected, the transmon frequencies decrease with increasing field, due to suppression of the superconducting gap and a geometric Fraunhofer-like contribution. Nevertheless, the thin-film transmons show strong magnetic field resilience: both transmons display microsecond coherence up to at least 0.65 T, and ${T}_{1}$ remains above $1\phantom{\rule{0.2em}{0ex}}\ensuremath{\mu}\text{s}$ over the entire measurable range. SQUID spectroscopy is feasible up to 1 T, the limit of our magnet. We conclude that thin-film aluminum Josephson junctions are suitable hardware for superconducting circuits in the high-magnetic-field regime.
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