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Taeyoon Kim
Graduate Research Assistant
Superconducting radio-frequency (SRF) cavities offer a promising platform for quantum computing due to their long coherence times, yet integrating nonlinear elements like transmons for control often introduces additional loss. We report a multimode quantum system based on a 2-cell elliptical-shaped SRF cavity, comprising two cavity modes weakly coupled to an ancillary transmon circuit, designed to preserve coherence while enabling efficient control of the cavity modes. We mitigate the detrimental effects of the transmon decoherence through careful design optimization that reduces transmon-cavity couplings and participation in the dielectric substrate and lossy interfaces, to achieve single-photon lifetimes of 20.6 ms and 15.6 ms for the two modes, and a pure dephasing time exceeding 40 ms. This marks an order-of-magnitude improvement over prior 3D multimode memories. Leveraging sideband interactions and novel error-resilient protocols, including measurement-based correction and post-selection, we achieve high-fidelity control over quantum states. This enables the preparation of Fock states up to N=20 with fidelities exceeding 95%, the highest reported to date to the authors’ knowledge, as well as two-mode entanglement with an estimated coherence-limited fidelities of 99.9% after post-selection. These results establish our platform as a robust foundation for quantum information processing, allowing for future extensions to high-dimensional qudit encodings.
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Graduate Research Assistant
Taeyoon Kim received a bachelor’s degree in Physics from Hanyang University and is now a Ph.D. candidate at Northwestern University, working on quantum information technology research with high-Q superconducting 3D cavities at the Fermilab SQMS Center.
Customer Success Team Lead
Bio
Kevin Villegas is a Customer Success Team Lead at Quantum Machines. He helps labs worldwide implement pulse-level control sequences, and has worked with tens of labs to set up their control devices and trained hundreds of physicists along the way. Previously, he conducted Ph.D. research in Physics at Princeton University, studying electron ordering in ultra-clean GaAs 2D systems with ultra-low-noise measurements and dilution-refrigerator cryogenics, contributing to multiple publications. Kevin also co-directed the REPU program, leading admissions and mentoring initiatives that placed Peruvian undergraduates in top research groups. His interests include scalable calibration workflows, feedback and feed-forward control, and bringing the gap between academic-based quantum devices and quantum utility.
On-demand seminar
Have a specific experiment in mind and wondering about the best quantum control and electronics setup?
Want to see what our quantum control and cryogenic electronics solutions can do for your qubits?