Tutorials
qcr:2606.18824.1

Superconducting Qubit Quantum Computers

This PennyLane tutorial is an accessible introduction to superconducting quantum computers, the platform behind many of the best-known quantum processors from industry. It explains the physical principles: qubits are built from superconducting electrical circuits, tiny resonators made non-linear by Josephson junctions, cooled to near absolute zero so that the lowest two energy levels of the circuit form an artificial atom that serves as a qubit. The tutorial describes how the transmon, the dominant superconducting qubit design, is engineered to suppress charge noise, how single-qubit gates are performed by driving the circuit with precisely-shaped microwave pulses, and how two-qubit entangling gates are realized through tunable couplings or shared resonators between neighboring qubits. It covers the platform's strengths, fast gate speeds and strong integration with classical microwave electronics and fabrication, as well as its challenges, such as short coherence times relative to other platforms and limited (nearest-neighbor) connectivity. By explaining the circuits, the role of the Josephson junction, and the microwave-pulse control from the ground up, the tutorial gives readers a clear understanding of how superconducting quantum computers work and why they are a leading quantum hardware architecture.
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Overview

PennyLaneAI/demos
667238
README.md

Superconducting Qubit Quantum Computers

This PennyLane tutorial is an accessible introduction to superconducting quantum computers, the platform behind many of the best-known quantum processors from industry. It explains the physical principles: qubits are built from superconducting electrical circuits, tiny resonators made non-linear by Josephson junctions, cooled to near absolute zero so that the lowest two energy levels of the circuit form an artificial atom that serves as a qubit. The tutorial describes how the transmon, the dominant superconducting qubit design, is engineered to suppress charge noise, how single-qubit gates are performed by driving the circuit with precisely-shaped microwave pulses, and how two-qubit entangling gates are realized through tunable couplings or shared resonators between neighboring qubits. It covers the platform's strengths, fast gate speeds and strong integration with classical microwave electronics and fabrication, as well as its challenges, such as short coherence times relative to other platforms and limited (nearest-neighbor) connectivity. By explaining the circuits, the role of the Josephson junction, and the microwave-pulse control from the ground up, the tutorial gives readers a clear understanding of how superconducting quantum computers work and why they are a leading quantum hardware architecture.

Run it

pip install -r requirements.txt
python demo.py

Source and license

Imported from demonstrations_v2/tutorial_sc_qubits/demo.py in PennyLaneAI/demos at c52c0abeb5122218aa96b38eea848864cce7323f, under the Apache License 2.0. Original authors: Xanadu and the PennyLane community. The upstream LICENSE is included alongside this example.

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Versions

v1 Latest
Jun 17, 2026
qcr:2606.18824.1

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Tools used

PennyLane

Keywords

superconducting-qubits
transmon
quantum-hardware
pennylane
josephson-junction

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