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Evaluating radiation impact on transmon qubits in above and underground facilities

Authors :
De Dominicis, Francesco
Roy, Tanay
Mariani, Ambra
Bal, Mustafa
Casali, Nicola
Colantoni, Ivan
Crisa, Francesco
Cruciani, Angelo
Ferroni, Fernando
Helis, Dounia L
Pagnanini, Lorenzo
Pettinacci, Valerio
Pilipenko, Roman
Pirro, Stefano
Puiu, Andrei
Romanenko, Alexander
Vignati, Marco
Zanten, David v
Zhu, Shaojiang
Grassellino, Anna
Cardani, Laura
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Superconducting qubits can be sensitive to abrupt energy deposits caused by cosmic rays and ambient radioactivity. Previous studies have focused on understanding possible correlated effects over time and distance due to cosmic rays. In this study, for the first time, we directly compare the response of a transmon qubit measured initially at the Fermilab SQMS above-ground facilities and then at the deep underground Gran Sasso Laboratory (INFN-LNGS, Italy). We observe same average qubit lifetime T$_1$ of roughly 80 microseconds at above and underground facilities. We then apply a fast decay detection protocol and investigate the time structure, sensitivity and relative rates of triggered events due to radiation versus intrinsic noise, comparing above and underground performance of several high-coherence qubits. Using gamma sources of variable activity we calibrate the response of the qubit to different levels of radiation in an environment with minimal background radiation. Results indicate that qubits respond to a strong gamma source and it is possible to detect particle impacts. However, when comparing above and underground results, we do not observe a difference in radiation induced-like events for these sapphire and niobium-based transmon qubits. We conclude that the majority of these events are not radiation related and to be attributed to other noise sources which by far dominate single qubit errors in modern transmon qubits.<br />Comment: 9+7 pages, 7+5 figures

Subjects

Subjects :
Quantum Physics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2405.18355
Document Type :
Working Paper