Samantha V. Barron, Daniel J. Egger, et al.
Nat. Comput. Sci.
Fixed-frequency superconducting qubits demonstrate remarkable success as platforms for stable and scalable quantum computing. Cross-resonance gates have been the workhorse of fixed-coupling, fixed-frequency superconducting processors, leveraging the entanglement generated by driving one qubit resonantly with a neighbor's frequency to achieve high-fidelity, universal controlled-not (cnot) gates. Here, we use on-resonant and off-resonant microwave drives to go beyond cross-resonance, realizing natively interesting two-qubit gates that are not equivalent to cnot gates. In particular, we implement and benchmark native iswap, swap, iSWAP, and bswap gates; in fact, any SU(4) unitary can be achieved using these techniques. Furthermore, we apply these techniques for an efficient construction of the B gate: a perfect entangler from which any two-qubit gate can be reached in only two applications. We show that these native two-qubit gates are better than their counterparts compiled from cross-resonance gates. We elucidate the resonance conditions required to drive each two-qubit gate and provide a novel frame tracking technique to implement them in Qiskit.
Samantha V. Barron, Daniel J. Egger, et al.
Nat. Comput. Sci.
Zhancheng Yao, Martin Sandberg, et al.
MRS Fall Meeting 2024
David Peral-garcía, Juan Cruz-Benito, et al.
ICIST 2023
Werner Dobrautz, Igor Sokolov, et al.
APS March Meeting 2023