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Fast and accurate qubit measurement remains a critical challenge on the path to fault-tolerant quantum computing. In superconducting quantum circuits, fast qubit measurement has been achieved using a dispersively coupled resonator with a large externally limited linewidth. This necessitates the use of a Purcell filter that protects the qubit from relaxation through the readout channel. Here, we show that a readout resonator and filter resonator, coupled to each other both capacitively and inductively via a multiconductor transmission line, can produce a compact notch-filter circuit that effectively eliminates the Purcell decay channel through destructive interference. By utilizing linewidths as large as 42 MHz, we perform simultaneous readout of four qubits using a 56-ns integration window and benchmark an average assignment fidelity of 99.77%, with the highest qubit assignment fidelity exceeding 99.9%. Including the simulated readout ring-down time, the total readout duration was between 115 and 215 ns for the four qubits, which we anticipate can be reduced to around 100 ns with active ring-down pulse shaping. These results demonstrate a significant advancement in speed and fidelity for multiplexed superconducting-qubit readout.
Spring et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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