Abstract
Control of Quantum bits is a necessity for the overall goal of the community to implement
deterministic quantum computation. Superconducting qubits benefit from being addressable in the microwave regime, where signal generation is commercially well established. I will give an introduction in the control schemes used to control superconducting qubits, and explore the benefits of exploiting the full range of control design.
Short bio
Max Werninghaus received his Masters Degree from the University of Bonn, where he worked in the group of Dieter Meschede on the deterministic control of atoms trapped in an optical lattice. In 2018, he joined Stefan Filipp at IBM Research in Zurich, Switzerland, where he joined the team in the research of quantum computing based on superconducting qubits. In 2021, Max relocated to the new quantum computing group founded by Stefan Filipp at the Walther-Meissner-Institute in Munich, Germany, and finished his PhD work focussing on control of superconducting qubits in November 2022. Currently, he is coordinating the experimental efforts at the WMI under Stefan Filipp. The targets of the WMI quantum computing group include the scaling of superconducting qubit processors to provide a Bavaria-based cloud computing centre with processors with up to 100 qubits.
Relevant publications
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41534-020-00346-2
https://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PRXQuantum.2.020324