Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tathed, Gaurav A., Zutt, Nicholas C. F., Epstein, Collin J. C., Senko, Crystal
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2606.00358
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866918532577492992
author Tathed, Gaurav A.
Zutt, Nicholas C. F.
Epstein, Collin J. C.
Senko, Crystal
author_facet Tathed, Gaurav A.
Zutt, Nicholas C. F.
Epstein, Collin J. C.
Senko, Crystal
contents AC mains power line-synchronous disturbances are a common source of coherent, time-dependent error in precision quantum-control experiments. We show that when these disturbances are reproducible with respect to the mains phase, their effect can be measured in a line-triggered frame and compensated through software updates to control sequences. In our system, the disturbances manifest as magnetic-field-induced shifts in the energy level structure of a trapped $^{137}\text{Ba}^+$ ion, resulting in time-dependent detunings between the ion transitions and a local oscillator, as well as additional phases accumulated on superpositions of energy levels. We demonstrate a compensation protocol that corrects for the instantaneous oscillator detuning during control pulses, and for the phase accumulated by the energy levels between pulses. The calibrated AC line contribution to the detuning is reduced by $21(9)\times$, while the fitted AC phase amplitude is reduced below the measurement uncertainty. We then study gate performance on a magnetic-field-sensitive qubit and find that uncompensated mains-synchronous errors produce time-dependent fluctuations that make the usual randomized-benchmarking decay model unreliable. With compensation enabled, these fluctuations are suppressed sufficiently to recover a standard benchmarking decay and extract an average gate fidelity of $99.93(1)\%$. Finally, we extend the framework to multilevel qudit control and apply it to a single-qudit Bernstein-Vazirani algorithm, where AC compensation increases the success probability on a 16-level qudit from $10(7)\%$ to $70(9)\%$. These results show that reproducible line-synchronous noise can be treated as a calibrated control-frame error and corrected without additional hardware.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2606_00358
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Software-based compensation of AC-line-induced control errors in qubits and qudits
Tathed, Gaurav A.
Zutt, Nicholas C. F.
Epstein, Collin J. C.
Senko, Crystal
Quantum Physics
AC mains power line-synchronous disturbances are a common source of coherent, time-dependent error in precision quantum-control experiments. We show that when these disturbances are reproducible with respect to the mains phase, their effect can be measured in a line-triggered frame and compensated through software updates to control sequences. In our system, the disturbances manifest as magnetic-field-induced shifts in the energy level structure of a trapped $^{137}\text{Ba}^+$ ion, resulting in time-dependent detunings between the ion transitions and a local oscillator, as well as additional phases accumulated on superpositions of energy levels. We demonstrate a compensation protocol that corrects for the instantaneous oscillator detuning during control pulses, and for the phase accumulated by the energy levels between pulses. The calibrated AC line contribution to the detuning is reduced by $21(9)\times$, while the fitted AC phase amplitude is reduced below the measurement uncertainty. We then study gate performance on a magnetic-field-sensitive qubit and find that uncompensated mains-synchronous errors produce time-dependent fluctuations that make the usual randomized-benchmarking decay model unreliable. With compensation enabled, these fluctuations are suppressed sufficiently to recover a standard benchmarking decay and extract an average gate fidelity of $99.93(1)\%$. Finally, we extend the framework to multilevel qudit control and apply it to a single-qudit Bernstein-Vazirani algorithm, where AC compensation increases the success probability on a 16-level qudit from $10(7)\%$ to $70(9)\%$. These results show that reproducible line-synchronous noise can be treated as a calibrated control-frame error and corrected without additional hardware.
title Software-based compensation of AC-line-induced control errors in qubits and qudits
topic Quantum Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2606.00358