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Featured researches published by Eric Holland.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Reaching 10 ms single photon lifetimes for superconducting aluminum cavities

Matthew Reagor; Hanhee Paik; Gianluigi Catelani; Luyan Sun; Christopher Axline; Eric Holland; Ioan M. Pop; Nicholas Masluk; T. Brecht; Luigi Frunzio; Michel H. Devoret; Leonid I. Glazman; R. J. Schoelkopf

Three-dimensional microwave cavities have recently been combined with superconducting qubits in the circuit quantum electrodynamics architecture. These cavities should have less sensitivity to dielectric and conductor losses at surfaces and interfaces, which currently limit the performance of planar resonators. We expect that significantly (>103) higher quality factors and longer lifetimes should be achievable for 3D structures. Motivated by this principle, we have reached internal quality factors greater than 0.5 × 109 and intrinsic lifetimes of 0.01 s for multiple aluminum superconducting cavity resonators at single photon energies and millikelvin temperatures. These improvements could enable long lived quantum memories with submicrosecond access times when strongly coupled to superconducting qubits.


Physical Review B | 2016

A quantum memory with near-millisecond coherence in circuit QED

Matthew Reagor; Wolfgang Pfaff; Christopher Axline; Reinier Heeres; Nissim Ofek; Katrina Sliwa; Eric Holland; Chen Wang; Jacob Blumoff; Kevin Chou; M. Hatridge; Luigi Frunzio; Michel H. Devoret; Liang Jiang; R. J. Schoelkopf

Significant advances in coherence render superconducting quantum circuits a viable platform for fault-tolerant quantum computing. To further extend capabilities, highly coherent quantum systems could act as quantum memories for these circuits. A useful quantum memory must be rapidly addressable by Josephson-junction-based artificial atoms, while maintaining superior coherence. We demonstrate a superconducting microwave cavity architecture that is highly robust against major sources of loss that are encountered in the engineering of circuit QED systems. The architecture allows for storage of quantum superpositions in a resonator on the millisecond scale, while strong coupling between the resonator and a transmon qubit enables control, encoding, and readout at MHz rates. This extends the maximum available coherence time attainable in superconducting circuits by almost an order of magnitude compared to earlier hardware. Our design is an ideal platform for studying coherent quantum optics and marks an important step towards hardware-efficient quantum computing in Josephson-junction-based quantum circuits.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Cavity State Manipulation Using Photon-Number Selective Phase Gates

Reinier Heeres; Brian Vlastakis; Eric Holland; Stefan Krastanov; Victor V. Albert; Luigi Frunzio; Liang Jiang; R. J. Schoelkopf

The large available Hilbert space and high coherence of cavity resonators make these systems an interesting resource for storing encoded quantum bits. To perform a quantum gate on this encoded information, however, complex nonlinear operations must be applied to the many levels of the oscillator simultaneously. In this work, we introduce the selective number-dependent arbitrary phase (snap) gate, which imparts a different phase to each Fock-state component using an off-resonantly coupled qubit. We show that the snap gate allows control over the quantum phases by correcting the unwanted phase evolution due to the Kerr effect. Furthermore, by combining the snap gate with oscillator displacements, we create a one-photon Fock state with high fidelity. Using just these two controls, one can construct arbitrary unitary operations, offering a scalable route to performing logical manipulations on oscillator-encoded qubits.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Single-Photon-Resolved Cross-Kerr Interaction for Autonomous Stabilization of Photon-Number States

Eric Holland; Brian Vlastakis; Reinier Heeres; Matthew Reagor; U. Vool; Zaki Leghtas; Luigi Frunzio; Gerhard Kirchmair; Michel H. Devoret; Mazyar Mirrahimi; R. J. Schoelkopf

Quantum states can be stabilized in the presence of intrinsic and environmental losses by either applying an active feedback condition on an ancillary system or through reservoir engineering. Reservoir engineering maintains a desired quantum state through a combination of drives and designed entropy evacuation. We propose and implement a quantum-reservoir engineering protocol that stabilizes Fock states in a microwave cavity. This protocol is realized with a circuit quantum electrodynamics platform where a Josephson junction provides direct, nonlinear coupling between two superconducting waveguide cavities. The nonlinear coupling results in a single-photon-resolved cross-Kerr effect between the two cavities enabling a photon-number-dependent coupling to a lossy environment. The quantum state of the microwave cavity is discussed in terms of a net polarization and is analyzed by a measurement of its steady state Wigner function.


Applied Physics Letters | 2017

High-kinetic inductance additive manufactured superconducting microwave cavity

Eric Holland; Yaniv Rosen; Nicholas Materise; Nathan Woollett; Thomas Voisin; Y. Morris Wang; Sharon G. Torres; Jorge Mireles; G. Carosi; Jonathan L. DuBois

Investigations into the microwave surface impedance of superconducting resonators have led to the development of single photon counters that rely on kinetic inductance for their operation, while concurrent progress in additive manufacturing, “3D printing,” opens up a previously inaccessible design space for waveguide resonators. In this manuscript, we present results from the synthesis of these two technologies in a titanium, aluminum, vanadium (Ti-6Al-4V) superconducting radio frequency resonator which exploits a design unattainable through conventional fabrication means. We find that Ti-6Al-4V has two distinct superconducting transition temperatures observable in heat capacity measurements. The higher transition temperature is in agreement with DC resistance measurements, while the lower transition temperature, not previously known in the literature, is consistent with the observed temperature dependence of the superconducting microwave surface impedance. From the surface reactance, we extract a London ...


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012

Quality Factor Measurements with Improved Superconducting Stripline Resonators

Eric Holland; Luyan Sun; Matthew Reagor; Kevin Chou; Luigi Frunzio; R. J. Schoelkopf


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Optimization of passive error correction parameters for the Very Small Logical Qubit

David Rodriguez Perez; Eric Holland; Jonathan L. DuBois; Eliot Kapit


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Additive Manufactured Superconducting Cavities

Eric Holland; Yaniv Rosen; Nathan Woolleet; Nicholas Materise; Thomas Voisin; Morris Wang; Jorge Mireles; G. Carosi; Jonathan L. DuBois


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

Cavity state manipulation using a dispersively coupled qubit

Reinier Heeres; Brian Vlastakis; Eric Holland; Stefan Krastanov; Victor V. Albert; Chao Shen; Liang Jiang; R. J. Schoelkopf


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

Engineering non-linear resonator mode interactions in circuit QED by continuous driving: Manipulation of a photonic quantum memory

Matthew Reagor; Wolfgang Pfaff; Reinier Heeres; Nissim Ofek; Kevin Chou; Jacob Blumoff; Zaki Leghtas; Steven Touzard; Katrina Sliwa; Eric Holland; Victor V. Albert; Luigi Frunzio; Michel H. Devoret; Liang Jiang; R. J. Schoelkopf

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