Decoherence and Decay of Two-level Systems due to Non-equilibrium Quasiparticles

Authors: Sebastian Zanker, Michael Marthaler, Gerd Schön

It is frequently observed that even at very low temperatures the number of quasiparticles in superconducting materials is higher than predicted by standard BCS-theory. These quasiparticles can interact with two-level systems, such as superconducting qubits or two-level systems (TLS) in the amorphous oxide layer of a Josephson junction. This interaction leads to decay and decoherence of the TLS, with specific results, such as the time dependence, depending on the distribution of quasiparticles and the form of the interaction. We study the resulting decay laws for different experimentally relevant protocols.

https://arxiv.org/abs/1601.03861

Previous
Previous

Emulating the one-dimensional Fermi-Hubbard model by a double chain of qubits

Next
Next

Distortion of a reduced equilibrium density matrix: influence on quantum emulation