Baleegh Abdo
IBM
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Publication
Featured researches published by Baleegh Abdo.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
Maika Takita; Antonio Corcoles; Easwar Magesan; Baleegh Abdo; Markus Brink; Andrew W. Cross; Jerry M. Chow; Jay M. Gambetta
We present parity measurements on a five-qubit lattice with connectivity amenable to the surface code quantum error correction architecture. Using all-microwave controls of superconducting qubits coupled via resonators, we encode the parities of four data qubit states in either the X or the Z basis. Given the connectivity of the lattice, we perform a full characterization of the static Z interactions within the set of five qubits, as well as dynamical Z interactions brought along by single- and two-qubit microwave drives. The parity measurements are significantly improved by modifying the microwave two-qubit gates to dynamically remove nonideal Z errors.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
Hanhee Paik; A. Mezzacapo; Martin Sandberg; Doug McClure; Baleegh Abdo; Antonio Corcoles; O. Dial; Daniela F. Bogorin; B.L.T. Plourde; Matthias Steffen; Andrew W. Cross; Jay M. Gambetta; Jerry M. Chow
The resonator-induced phase (RIP) gate is an all-microwave multiqubit entangling gate that allows a high degree of flexibility in qubit frequencies, making it attractive for quantum operations in large-scale architectures. We experimentally realize the RIP gate with four superconducting qubits in a three-dimensional circuit-QED architecture, demonstrating high-fidelity controlled-z (cz) gates between all possible pairs of qubits from two different 4-qubit devices in pair subspaces. These qubits are arranged within a wide range of frequency detunings, up to as large as 1.8xa0GHz. We further show a dynamical multiqubit refocusing scheme in order to isolate out 2-qubit interactions, and combine them to generate a 4-qubit Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger state.
Applied Physics Letters | 2017
Sarah Sheldon; Martin Sandberg; Hanhee Paik; Baleegh Abdo; Jerry M. Chow; Matthias Steffen; Jay M. Gambetta
We present a method for detecting electromagnetic (EM) modes that couple to a superconducting qubit in a circuit quantum electrodynamics architecture. Based on measurement-induced dephasing, this technique allows the measurement of modes that have a high quality factor (Q) and may be difficult to detect through standard transmission and reflection measurements at the device ports. In this scheme, the qubit itself acts as a sensitive phase meter, revealing modes that couple to it through measurements of its coherence time. Such modes are indistinguishable from EM modes that do not couple to the qubit using a vector network analyzer. Moreover, this technique provides useful characterization parameters including the quality factor and the coupling strength of the unwanted resonances. We demonstrate the method for detecting both high-Q coupling resonators in planar devices as well as spurious modes produced by a 3D cavity.
Archive | 2015
Baleegh Abdo
Archive | 2017
Baleegh Abdo
Archive | 2017
Baleegh Abdo
Archive | 2015
Baleegh Abdo; Jerry M. Chow; Jay M. Gambetta; Hanhee Paik
Archive | 2017
Baleegh Abdo
Archive | 2017
Baleegh Abdo
Archive | 2017
Baleegh Abdo