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Dive into the research topics where John Hornibrook is active.

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Featured researches published by John Hornibrook.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Dispersive readout of a few-electron double quantum dot with fast RF gate sensors.

James Colless; Alice Mahoney; John Hornibrook; Andrew C. Doherty; Hong Lu; A. C. Gossard; D. J. Reilly

We report the dispersive charge-state readout of a double quantum dot in the few-electron regime using the in situ gate electrodes as sensitive detectors. We benchmark this gate sensing technique against the well established quantum point contact charge detector and find comparable performance with a bandwidth of ∼ 10 MHz and an equivalent charge sensitivity of ∼ 6.3 × 10(-3) e/sqrt[Hz]. Dispersive gate sensing alleviates the burden of separate charge detectors for quantum dot systems and promises to enable readout of qubits in scaled-up arrays.


Physical review applied | 2015

Cryogenic Control Architecture for Large-Scale Quantum Computing

John Hornibrook; James Colless; I. D. Conway Lamb; S. J. Pauka; Hong Lu; A. C. Gossard; J. D. Watson; G. C. Gardner; S. Fallahi; M. J. Manfra; D. J. Reilly

Solid-state qubits have recently advanced to the level that enables them, in-principle, to be scaled-up into fault-tolerant quantum computers. As these physical qubits continue to advance, meeting the challenge of realising a quantum machine will also require the engineering of new classical hardware and control architectures with complexity far beyond the systems used in todays few-qubit experiments. Here, we report a micro-architecture for controlling and reading out qubits during the execution of a quantum algorithm such as an error correcting code. We demonstrate the basic principles of this architecture in a configuration that distributes components of the control system across different temperature stages of a dilution refrigerator, as determined by the available cooling power. The combined setup includes a cryogenic field-programmable gate array (FPGA) controlling a switching matrix at 20 millikelvin which, in turn, manipulates a semiconductor qubit.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Frequency multiplexing for readout of spin qubits

John Hornibrook; James Colless; Alice Mahoney; X. G. Croot; S. Blanvillain; Hong Lu; A. C. Gossard; D. J. Reilly

We demonstrate a low loss, chip-level frequency multiplexing scheme for readout of scaled-up spin qubit devices. By integrating separate bias tees and resonator circuits on-chip for each readout channel, we realise dispersive gate-sensing in combination with charge detection based on two radio frequency quantum point contacts. We apply this approach to perform multiplexed readout of a double quantum dot in the few-electron regime and further demonstrate operation of a 10-channel multiplexing device. Limitations for scaling spin qubit readout to large numbers of multiplexed channels are discussed.


Physical Review X | 2017

On-Chip Microwave Quantum Hall Circulator

Alice Mahoney; James Colless; S. J. Pauka; John Hornibrook; J. D. Watson; Geoffrey C. Gardner; Michael J. Manfra; Andrew C. Doherty; D. J. Reilly

Circulators are non-reciprocal circuit elements integral to technologies including radar systems, microwave communication transceivers, and the readout of quantum information devices. Their non-reciprocity arises from the interference of microwaves over the centimetre-scale of the signal wavelength in the presence of bulky magnetic media that break time-reversal symmetry. Here we realize a completely passive on-chip microwave circulator with size one-thousandth the wavelength by exploiting the chiral, slow-light response of a 2-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) in the quantum Hall regime. For an integrated GaAs device with 330 um diameter and 1 GHz centre frequency, a non-reciprocity of 25 dB is observed over a 50 MHz bandwidth. Furthermore, the direction of circulation can be selected dynamically by varying the magnetic field, an aspect that may enable reconfigurable passive routing of microwave signals on-chip.


Superconductor Science and Technology | 2016

Flexible superconducting Nb transmission lines on thin film polyimide for quantum computing applications

David B. Tuckerman; Michael C. Hamilton; D. J. Reilly; Rujun Bai; George A. Hernandez; John Hornibrook; John A. Sellers; Charles D. Ellis

We describe progress and initial results achieved towards the goal of developing integrated multi-conductor arrays of shielded controlled-impedance flexible superconducting transmission lines with ultra-miniature cross sections and wide bandwidths (dc to >10 GHz) over meter-scale lengths. Intended primarily for use in future scaled-up quantum computing systems, such flexible thin-film Nb/polyimide ribbon cables provide a physically compact and ultra-low thermal conductance alternative to the rapidly increasing number of discrete coaxial cables that are currently used by quantum computing experimentalists to transmit signals between the low-temperature stages (from ~ 4 K down to ~ 20 mK) of a dilution refrigerator. S-parameters are presented for 2-metal layer Nb microstrip structures with lengths ranging up to 550 mm. Weakly coupled open-circuit microstrip resonators provided a sensitive measure of the overall transmission line loss as a function of frequency, temperature, and power. Two common polyimide dielectrics, one conventional and the other photo-definable (PI-2611 and HD-4100, respectively) were compared. Our most striking result, not previously reported to our knowledge, was that the dielectric loss tangents of both polyimides are remarkably low at deep cryogenic temperatures, typically 100


Physics Procedia | 2012

Parasitic Losses in Nb Superconducting Resonators

John Hornibrook; E. E. Mitchell; C.J. Lewis; D. J. Reilly

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Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Time Division Multiplexing of Semiconductor Qubits

Marie Claire Jarratt; John Hornibrook; Xanthe Croot; John Watson; Geoff Gardner; Saeed Fallahi; Michael J. Manfra; D. J. Reilly

smaller than corresponding room temperature values. This enables fairly long-distance transmission of microwave signals without excessive attenuation and permits usefully high rf power levels to be transmitted without creating excessive dielectric heating. We observed loss tangents as low as 2.2


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

On-chip microwave circulators using quantum Hall plasmonics

Alice Mahoney; James Colless; S. J. Pauka; John Hornibrook; Andrew C. Doherty; D. J. Reilly; Lucas Peeters; Eli Fox; David Goldhaber-Gordon; Xuefeng Kou; Lei Pan; Kang L. Wang; John Watson; Geoffrey C. Gardner; Michael J. Manfra

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Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Publisher’s Note: “An FPGA-based instrumentation platform for use at deep cryogenic temperatures” [Rev. Sci. Instrum. 87, 014701 (2016)]

I. D. Conway Lamb; James Colless; John Hornibrook; S. J. Pauka; S. J. Waddy; M. K. Frechtling; D. J. Reilly

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Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

Spectroscopy of a GaAs Double Dot Qubit with Dispersive Readout

James Colless; Alice Mahoney; Xanthe Croot; John Hornibrook; Andrew C. Doherty; Thomas M. Stace; Hong Lu; A. C. Gossard; D. J. Reilly

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James Colless

University of California

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A. C. Gossard

University of California

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Hong Lu

University of California

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