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Dephasing of a flux-qubit coupled to a harmonic oscillator

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abstract

Decoherence in superconducting qubits is known to arise because of a variety of environmental degrees of freedom. In this article, we focus on the influence of thermal fluctuations in a weakly damped circuit resonance coupled to the qubit. Because of the coupling, the qubit frequency is shifted by an amount $n \delta \nu_0$ if the resonator contains $n$ energy quanta. Thermal fluctuations induce temporal variations $n(t)$ and thus dephasing. We give an approximate formula for the qubit dephasing time as a function of $\delta \nu_0$. We discuss the specific case of a flux-qubit coupled to the plasma mode of its DC-SQUID detector. We first derive a plasma mode-qubit interaction hamiltonian which, in addition to the usual Jaynes-Cummings term, has a coupling term quadratic in the oscillator variables coming from the flux-dependence of the SQUID Josephson inductance. Our model predicts that $\delta \nu_0$ cancels in certain non-trivial bias conditions for which dephasing due to thermal fluctuations should be suppressed.

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quant-ph 1

years

2025 1

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UNVERDICTED 1

representative citing papers

Quantum Resonator as a Directional Quantum Emitter

quant-ph · 2025-05-14 · unverdicted · novelty 5.0

A two-photon Jaynes-Cummings model with the resonator as emitter converts a one-photon-average coherent pulse into a single-photon pulse with efficiency, purity, and indistinguishability above 90 percent while remaining robust to atomic dephasing.

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  • Quantum Resonator as a Directional Quantum Emitter quant-ph · 2025-05-14 · unverdicted · none · ref 45 · internal anchor

    A two-photon Jaynes-Cummings model with the resonator as emitter converts a one-photon-average coherent pulse into a single-photon pulse with efficiency, purity, and indistinguishability above 90 percent while remaining robust to atomic dephasing.