Scalable quantum computing with superconducting circuits – a dream becoming true
报告人: Siyuan Han (Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045, USA)
报告时间: 2017年5月16日 16:00
报告地点: 郑裕彤讲堂
Abstract: Harnessing the power of intrinsic quantum parallelism for information processing has been a dream for many decades.
In recent years, breakthroughs in the development of superconducting qubits and circuit QED makes the superconducting approach
one of the most promising candidates for scalable quantum information processing. Superconducting qubits, such as flux and phase
qubits, are engineered artificial atoms with many distinctive advantages: they can be designed, simulated, and fabricated by leveraging
advanced semiconductor integrated circuit technology; their properties can be characterized and adjusted accurately in situ; coherence
time has been improved continuously and is reaching the level required for fault-tolerance quantum computing; fast single- and multi-qubit
gates with high fidelity has been demostrated, and the circuits can be readily expanded to form large scale quantum processors.
In particular, it has been demonstrated that a superconducting resonator provides a quantized cavity field which can mediate
long-range and fast interaction between distant superconducting qubits. More importantly, by exploiting the super-exchange pair
interactions mediated by two-level couplers (or resonators) between qubits one can build scalable quantum information networks.
I will give a brief review on the present status and future direction of superconducting approach to quantum computing and report
some of our recent results in this increasingly exciting research field.
*This work is supported in part by NSF PHY-1314861