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Fidelity and visibility loss in Majorana qubits by entanglement with environmental modes

Morten I. K. Munk, Reinhold Egger, and Karsten Flensberg
Phys. Rev. B 99, 155419 – Published 23 April 2019

Abstract

We study the dynamics and readout of topological qubits encoded by zero-energy Majorana bound states in a topological superconductor. We take into account bosonic modes due to the electromagnetic environment which couple the Majorana manifold to above-gap continuum quasiparticles. This coupling causes the degenerate ground state of the topological superconductor to be dressed in a polaronlike manner by quasiparticle states and bosons, and the system to become gapless. Topological protection and hence full coherence is only maintained if the qubit is operated and read out within the low-energy spectrum of the dressed states. We discuss reduction of fidelity and/or visibility if this condition is violated by a quantum-dot readout that couples to the bare (undressed) Majorana modes. For a projective measurement of the bare Majorana basis, we formulate a Bloch-Redfield approach that is valid for weak Majorana-environment coupling and takes into account constraints imposed by fermion-number-parity conservation. Within the Markovian approximation, our results essentially confirm earlier theories of finite-temperature decoherence based on Fermi's golden rule. However, the full non-Markovian dynamics reveals, in addition, the fidelity reduction by a projective measurement. Using a spinless nanowire model with p-wave pairing, we provide quantitative results characterizing these effects.

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  • Received 17 January 2019

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.99.155419

©2019 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Quantum Information, Science & TechnologyCondensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Authors & Affiliations

Morten I. K. Munk1, Reinhold Egger2, and Karsten Flensberg1

  • 1Center for Quantum Devices, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark
  • 2Institut für Theoretische Physik, Heinrich-Heine-Universität, 40225 Düsseldorf, Germany

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Issue

Vol. 99, Iss. 15 — 15 April 2019

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