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Dive into the research topics where Philipp Kurpiers is active.

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Featured researches published by Philipp Kurpiers.


Nature | 2013

Deterministic quantum teleportation with feed-forward in a solid state system

L. Steffen; Yves Salathe; Markus Oppliger; Philipp Kurpiers; M. Baur; C. Lang; C. Eichler; G. Puebla-Hellmann; Arkady Fedorov; A. Wallraff

Transferring the state of an information carrier from a sender to a receiver is an essential primitive in both classical and quantum communication and information processing. In a quantum process known as teleportation the unknown state of a quantum bit can be relayed to a distant party using shared entanglement and classical information. Here we present experiments in a solid-state system based on superconducting quantum circuits demonstrating the teleportation of the state of a qubit at the macroscopic scale. In our experiments teleportation is realized deterministically with high efficiency and achieves a high rate of transferred qubit states. This constitutes a significant step towards the realization of repeaters for quantum communication at microwave frequencies and broadens the tool set for quantum information processing with superconducting circuits.Engineered macroscopic quantum systems based on superconducting electronic circuits are attractive for experimentally exploring diverse questions in quantum information science. At the current state of the art, quantum bits (qubits) are fabricated, initialized, controlled, read out and coupled to each other in simple circuits. This enables the realization of basic logic gates, the creation of complex entangled states and the demonstration of algorithms or error correction. Using different variants of low-noise parametric amplifiers, dispersive quantum non-demolition single-shot readout of single-qubit states with high fidelity has enabled continuous and discrete feedback control of single qubits. Here we realize full deterministic quantum teleportation with feed-forward in a chip-based superconducting circuit architecture. We use a set of two parametric amplifiers for both joint two-qubit and individual qubit single-shot readout, combined with flexible real-time digital electronics. Our device uses a crossed quantum bus technology that allows us to create complex networks with arbitrary connecting topology in a planar architecture. The deterministic teleportation process succeeds with order unit probability for any input state, as we prepare maximally entangled two-qubit states as a resource and distinguish all Bell states in a single two-qubit measurement with high efficiency and high fidelity. We teleport quantum states between two macroscopic systems separated by 6 mm at a rate of 104 s−1, exceeding other reported implementations. The low transmission loss of superconducting waveguides is likely to enable the range of this and other schemes to be extended to significantly larger distances, enabling tests of non-locality and the realization of elements for quantum communication at microwave frequencies. The demonstrated feed-forward may also find application in error correction schemes.


Physical Review X | 2015

Digital Quantum Simulation of Spin Models with Circuit Quantum Electrodynamics

Yves Salathe; Mintu Mondal; Markus Oppliger; Johannes Heinsoo; Philipp Kurpiers; Anton Potočnik; Antonio Mezzacapo; Urtzi Las Heras García; Lucas Lamata Manuel; Enrique Leónidas Solano Villanueva; Stefan Filipp; A. Wallraff

Systems of interacting quantum spins show a rich spectrum of quantum phases and display interesting many-body dynamics. Computing characteristics of even small systems on conventional computers poses significant challenges. A quantum simulator has the potential to outperform standard computers in calculating the evolution of complex quantum systems. Here, we perform a digital quantum simulation of the paradigmatic Heisenberg and Ising interacting spin models using a two transmon-qubit circuit quantum electrodynamics setup. We make use of the exchange interaction naturally present in the simulator to construct a digital decomposition of the model-specific evolution and extract its full dynamics. This approach is universal and efficient, employing only resources which are polynomial in the number of spins and indicates a path towards the controlled simulation of general spin dynamics in superconducting qubit platforms.


Physical review applied | 2017

Rapid High-Fidelity Single-Shot Dispersive Readout of Superconducting Qubits

Theodore Walter; Philipp Kurpiers; Simone Gasparinetti; Paul Magnard; Anton Potočnik; Yves Salathe; Marek Pechal; Mintu Mondal; Markus Oppliger; C. Eichler; A. Wallraff

The speed of quantum gates and measurements is a decisive factor for the overall fidelity of quantum protocols when performed on physical qubits with finite coherence time. Reducing the time required to distinguish qubit states with high fidelity is therefore a critical goal in quantum information science. The state-of-the-art readout of superconducting qubits is based on the dispersive interaction with a readout resonator. Here, we bring this technique to its current limit and demonstrate how the careful design of system parameters leads to fast and high-fidelity measurements without affecting qubit coherence. We achieve this result by increasing the dispersive interaction strength, by choosing an optimal linewidth of the readout resonator, by employing a Purcell filter, and by utilizing phase-sensitive parametric amplification. In our experiment, we measure 98.25% readout fidelity in only 48 ns, when minimizing read-out time, and 99.2% in 88 ns, when maximizing the fidelity, limited predominantly by the qubit lifetime of 7.6 us. The presented scheme is also expected to be suitable for integration into a multiplexed readout architecture.


Physical Review X | 2015

Exploring Interacting Quantum Many-Body Systems by Experimentally Creating Continuous Matrix Product States in Superconducting Circuits

C. Eichler; J. A. Mlynek; J. Butscher; Philipp Kurpiers; Klemens Hammerer; Tobias J. Osborne; A. Wallraff

Improving the understanding of strongly correlated quantum many body systems such as gases of interacting atoms or electrons is one of the most important challenges in modern condensed matter physics, materials research and chemistry. Enormous progress has been made in the past decades in developing both classical and quantum approaches to calculate, simulate and experimentally probe the properties of such systems. In this work we use a combination of classical and quantum methods to experimentally explore the properties of an interacting quantum gas by creating experimental realizations of continuous matrix product states - a class of states which has proven extremely powerful as a variational ansatz for numerical simulations. By systematically preparing and probing these states using a circuit quantum electrodynamics (cQED) system we experimentally determine a good approximation to the ground-state wave function of the Lieb-Liniger Hamiltonian, which describes an interacting Bose gas in one dimension. Since the simulated Hamiltonian is encoded in the measurement observable rather than the controlled quantum system, this approach has the potential to apply to exotic models involving multicomponent interacting fields. Our findings also hint at the possibility of experimentally exploring general properties of matrix product states and entanglement theory. The scheme presented here is applicable to a broad range of systems exploiting strong and tunable light-matter interactions.


Nature | 2018

Deterministic quantum state transfer and remote entanglement using microwave photons

Philipp Kurpiers; Paul Magnard; Theo Walter; Baptiste Royer; Marek Pechal; Johannes Heinsoo; Yves Salathe; Abdulkadir Akin; Simon Storz; Jean-Claude Besse; Simone Gasparinetti; Alexandre Blais; A. Wallraff

Sharing information coherently between nodes of a quantum network is fundamental to distributed quantum information processing. In this scheme, the computation is divided into subroutines and performed on several smaller quantum registers that are connected by classical and quantum channels1. A direct quantum channel, which connects nodes deterministically rather than probabilistically, achieves larger entanglement rates between nodes and is advantageous for distributed fault-tolerant quantum computation2. Here we implement deterministic state-transfer and entanglement protocols between two superconducting qubits fabricated on separate chips. Superconducting circuits3 constitute a universal quantum node4 that is capable of sending, receiving, storing and processing quantum information5–8. Our implementation is based on an all-microwave cavity-assisted Raman process9, which entangles or transfers the qubit state of a transmon-type artificial atom10 with a time-symmetric itinerant single photon. We transfer qubit states by absorbing these itinerant photons at the receiving node, with a probability of 98.1 ± 0.1 per cent, achieving a transfer-process fidelity of 80.02 ± 0.07 per cent for a protocol duration of only 180 nanoseconds. We also prepare remote entanglement on demand with a fidelity as high as 78.9 ± 0.1 per cent at a rate of 50 kilohertz. Our results are in excellent agreement with numerical simulations based on a master-equation description of the system. This deterministic protocol has the potential to be used for quantum computing distributed across different nodes of a cryogenic network.Deterministic quantum state transfer and entanglement generation is demonstrated between superconducting qubits on distant chips using single photons.


Physical Review X | 2018

Single-Shot Quantum Nondemolition Detection of Individual Itinerant Microwave Photons

Jean-Claude Besse; Simone Gasparinetti; Michele C. Collodo; Theo Walter; Philipp Kurpiers; Marek Pechal; C. Eichler; A. Wallraff

A new approach to detecting single microwave photons offers nondestructive detection and a high detection fidelity, paving the way to novel applications in remote entanglement and quantum computation.


Nature Communications | 2015

Measurement of geometric dephasing using a superconducting qubit.

S. Berger; Marek Pechal; Philipp Kurpiers; A. A. Abdumalikov Jr.; C. Eichler; J. A. Mlynek; Alexander Shnirman; Yuval Gefen; A. Wallraff; Stefan Filipp

A quantum system interacting with its environment is subject to dephasing, which ultimately destroys the information it holds. Here we use a superconducting qubit to experimentally show that this dephasing has both dynamic and geometric origins. It is found that geometric dephasing, which is present even in the adiabatic limit and when no geometric phase is acquired, can either reduce or restore coherence depending on the orientation of the path the qubit traces out in its projective Hilbert space. It accompanies the evolution of any system in Hilbert space subjected to noise.


Physical review applied | 2018

Low-Latency Digital Signal Processing for Feedback and Feedforward in Quantum Computing and Communication

Yves Salathe; Philipp Kurpiers; Thomas Karg; C. Lang; Christian Kraglund Andersen; Abdulkadir Akin; Sebastian Krinner; C. Eichler; A. Wallraff

Feedback is a main component of many algorithms for quantum computing and communication. A key requirement for any quantum feedback scheme is that the


EPJ Quantum Technology | 2017

Characterizing the attenuation of coaxial and rectangular microwave-frequency waveguides at cryogenic temperatures

Philipp Kurpiers; Theodore Walter; Paul Magnard; Yves Salathe; A. Wallraff

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Physical Review Letters | 2018

Fast and Unconditional All-Microwave Reset of a Superconducting Qubit

Paul Magnard; Philipp Kurpiers; Baptiste Royer; Theo Walter; Jean-Claude Besse; Simone Gasparinetti; Marek Pechal; Johannes Heinsoo; Simon Storz; Alexandre Blais; A. Wallraff

of the feedback loop (

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Mintu Mondal

Tata Institute of Fundamental Research

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