Microwave-optic interconnects for superconducting circuits
Arnold GM. 2025. Microwave-optic interconnects for superconducting circuits. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.
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Abstract
"Can we do this with a new type of computer - a quantum computer?". This famous
quotation of the brilliant Richard Feynman within a conference talk on "Simulating physics
with computers.” is often reverently praised as the origin of the field of quantum computing.
The idea was to use quantum mechanical systems itself to simulate "Nature", which is
inherently quantum mechanical. Now, 43 years later, the theoretical framework of how such
a computer can operate has been developed. Two main important concepts for a potential
quantum supremacy, superposition and entanglement, have been exploited to design quantum
algorithms to significantly speed up certain tasks. Yet, the specific hardware implementation
is still far from being certain, in fact the race between the most promising platforms such as
superconducting qubits, bosonic codes, cold atoms, trapped ions, optical computing as well
as spin qubits has recently intensified. If one also includes the most mature applications of
quantum communication technologies, secure quantum key distribution and quantum random
number generators, as part of a quantum information technology ecosystem, we are confronted
with a plethora of different materials, concepts, and also operation frequencies. While
superconducting qubits, bosonic codes and spin qubits work in the regime of approximately 5
GHz and are controlled by electrical fields, trapped ions, cold atoms, and optical quantum
computing operate with light in the infrared or visible range.
Consequently, a quantum frequency converter or microwave-optic transducer is required
to interface the different frequency domains or establish a long-range network connection
with suitable telecom fibers. In fact, the combination of different frequency regimes is also
an essential part in our classical modern communication network, where computations are
performed in electrical circuits and the information exchange over longer distances happens
via optical fibers. However, the specific challenges specific to building a quantum computer,
also apply to the development of such a quantum frequency transducer: 1) As we deal with
single excitations as the carrier of information, i.e. the smallest possible quantity, the signal
can easily be corrupted by other noise sources which needs to be avoided by all means. This
is also the reason why microwave quantum computers operate at temperature environments
close to zero temperature (< 0.1 Kelvin) to avoid corruption by thermal noise. 2) The
frequency interface generally needs to preserve the phase of the signal as an essential part
of the quantum state. And 3) Quantum signals cannot be copied which would be a typical
strategy to account for errors in classical computers. And finally, there is a challenge specific to
microwave-optic transducers: While quantum computers are operating in one specific frequency
domain, microwave-optic transducers combine microwave and optical fields in one device.
This results in the particular challenge that high-energy optical radiation, which is usually
well-shielded from superconducting microwave quantum processors, are now an essential part
of the device. The concomitant optical radiation in the operating transducer will inevitably
have a detrimental effect on the superconducting microwave components. Together with the
requirement of minimal background noise for quantum-limited operation as described above,
v
heating from the absorption of optical photons within the same device where single microwave
excitations are processed forms a formidable challenge.
This thesis aims to address this challenge by developing microwave-optic transducers where
the impact of optical absorption on superconducting circuits in general and superconducting
qubits specifically can be mitigated. In our first approach, we developed a compact device
with optimized interaction strengths between the different frequency domains. This minimizes
the optical powers used for transducer operation and thus the optical absorption heating. This
work was - to the best of our knowledge - the first comprehensive noise study, in an integrated
microwave-optic transducer. Unfortunately, we saw that the optical absorption heating added
noise way above a single excitation. Consequently, a potential quantum signal would have
been buried in the noise, added by the transduction.
Building on this insight, we utilized a three-dimensional microwave-optic transducer instead
of an integrated device. The larger heat capacity of the macroscopic device with a size
of a few millimeters can absorb a larger fraction of the optical heating before it increases
the temperature of the device. This allowed us to interface the transducer directly with a
superconducting qubit to readout the qubit state in a novel all-optical manner. We showed
that the microwave-optic transducer can be operated in a regime in which optical fields don’t
harm the sensitive qubit. This is an important prerequisite for the operation of microwave-optic
transducers in conjunction with microwave quantum processors and brings the integration and
seamless orchestration of different frequency components in a quantum network a step closer.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2025-01-24
Publisher
Institute of Science and Technology Austria
Acknowledgement
This work was supported by the European Research Council under grant agreement no. 758053
(ERC StG QUNNECT) and the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research, innovation program
under grant agreement no. 899354 (FETopen SuperQuLAN) and the Austrian Science Fund
(FWF) through BeyondC (F7105). I want to acknowledge generous support from the Austrian
Academy of Sciences from a DOC [Doctoral program of the Austrian Academy of Sciences]
fellowship (no. 25129).
Acknowledged SSUs
Page
135
ISSN
IST-REx-ID
Cite this
Arnold GM. Microwave-optic interconnects for superconducting circuits. 2025. doi:10.15479/at:ista:18871
Arnold, G. M. (2025). Microwave-optic interconnects for superconducting circuits. Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/at:ista:18871
Arnold, Georg M. “Microwave-Optic Interconnects for Superconducting Circuits.” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2025. https://doi.org/10.15479/at:ista:18871.
G. M. Arnold, “Microwave-optic interconnects for superconducting circuits,” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2025.
Arnold GM. 2025. Microwave-optic interconnects for superconducting circuits. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.
Arnold, Georg M. Microwave-Optic Interconnects for Superconducting Circuits. Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2025, doi:10.15479/at:ista:18871.
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