1,872 research outputs found
Cavity-assisted quantum bath engineering
We demonstrate quantum bath engineering for a superconducting artificial atom
coupled to a microwave cavity. By tailoring the spectrum of microwave photon
shot noise in the cavity, we create a dissipative environment that autonomously
relaxes the atom to an arbitrarily specified coherent superposition of the
ground and excited states. In the presence of background thermal excitations,
this mechanism increases the state purity and effectively cools the dressed
atom state to a low temperature
Resonance fluorescence from an artificial atom in squeezed vacuum
We present an experimental realization of resonance fluorescence in squeezed
vacuum. We strongly couple microwave-frequency squeezed light to a
superconducting artificial atom and detect the resulting fluorescence with high
resolution enabled by a broadband traveling-wave parametric amplifier. We
investigate the fluorescence spectra in the weak and strong driving regimes,
observing up to 3.1 dB of reduction of the fluorescence linewidth below the
ordinary vacuum level and a dramatic dependence of the Mollow triplet spectrum
on the relative phase of the driving and squeezed vacuum fields. Our results
are in excellent agreement with predictions for spectra produced by a two-level
atom in squeezed vacuum [Phys. Rev. Lett. \textbf{58}, 2539-2542 (1987)],
demonstrating that resonance fluorescence offers a resource-efficient means to
characterize squeezing in cryogenic environments
Measurement-induced qubit state mixing in circuit QED from up-converted dephasing noise
We observe measurement-induced qubit state mixing in a transmon qubit
dispersively coupled to a planar readout cavity. Our results indicate that
dephasing noise at the qubit-readout detuning frequency is up-converted by
readout photons to cause spurious qubit state transitions, thus limiting the
nondemolition character of the readout. Furthermore, we use the qubit
transition rate as a tool to extract an equivalent flux noise spectral density
at f ~ 1 GHz and find agreement with values extrapolated from a
fit to the measured flux noise spectral density below 1 Hz.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Final journal versio
RF bifurcation of a Josephson junction: microwave embedding circuit requirements
A Josephson tunnel junction which is RF-driven near a dynamical bifurcation
point can amplify quantum signals. The bifurcation point will exist robustly
only if the electrodynamic environment of the junction meets certain criteria.
In this article we develop a general formalism for dealing with the non-linear
dynamics of Josephson junction embedded in an arbitrary microwave circuit. We
find sufficient conditions for the existence of the bifurcation regime: a) the
embedding impedance of the junction need to present a resonance at a particular
frequency , with the quality factor of the resonance and the
participation ratio of the junction satisfying , b) the drive
frequency should be low frequency detuned away from by more than
.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. B, 12 pages, 6 figure
Measuring the Decoherence of a Quantronium Qubit with the Cavity Bifurcation Amplifier
Dispersive readouts for superconducting qubits have the advantage of speed
and minimal invasiveness. We have developed such an amplifier, the Cavity
Bifurcation Amplifier (CBA) [10], and applied it to the readout of the
quantronium qubit [2]. It consists of a Josephson junction embedded in a
microwave on-chip resonator. In contrast with the Josephson bifurcation
amplifier [17], which has an on-chip capacitor shunting a junction, the
resonator is based on a simple coplanar waveguide imposing a pre-determined
frequency and whose other RF characteristics like the quality factor are easily
controlled and optimized. Under proper microwave irradiation conditions, the
CBA has two metastable states. Which state is adopted by the CBA depends on the
state of a quantronium qubit coupled to the CBA's junction. Due to the MHz
repetition rate and large signal to noise ratio we can show directly that the
coherence is limited by 1/f gate charge noise when biased at the sweet spot - a
point insensitive to first order gate charge fluctuations. This architecture
lends itself to scalable quantum computing using a multi-resonator chip with
multiplexed readouts.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures To be published in Physical Review
Single-shot qubit readout in circuit Quantum Electrodynamics
The future development of quantum information using superconducting circuits
requires Josephson qubits [1] with long coherence times combined to a
high-fidelity readout. Major progress in the control of coherence has recently
been achieved using circuit quantum electrodynamics (cQED) architectures [2,
3], where the qubit is embedded in a coplanar waveguide resonator (CPWR) which
both provides a well controlled electromagnetic environment and serves as qubit
readout. In particular a new qubit design, the transmon, yields reproducibly
long coherence times [4, 5]. However, a high-fidelity single-shot readout of
the transmon, highly desirable for running simple quantum algorithms or measur-
ing quantum correlations in multi-qubit experiments, is still lacking. In this
work, we demonstrate a new transmon circuit where the CPWR is turned into a
sample-and-hold detector, namely a Josephson Bifurcation Amplifer (JBA) [6, 7],
which allows both fast measurement and single-shot discrimination of the qubit
states. We report Rabi oscillations with a high visibility of 94% together with
dephasing and relaxation times longer than 0:5 \mu\s. By performing two
subsequent measurements, we also demonstrate that this new readout does not
induce extra qubit relaxation.Comment: 14 pages including 4 figures, preprint forma
Dispersive readout of a flux qubit at the single photon level
A superconducting flux qubit is inductively coupled to a Superconducting
QUantum Interference Device (SQUID) magnetometer, capacitively shunted to form
a 1.294-GHz resonator. The qubit-state-dependent resonator frequency is weakly
probed with a microwave signal and detected with a Microstrip SQUID Amplifier.
At a mean resonator occupation = 1.5 photons, the readout visibility
is increased by a factor of 4.5 over that using a cryogenic semiconductor
amplifier. As is increased from 0.008 to 0.1, no reduction in
is observed, potentially enabling continuous monitoring of the qubit state.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Measurement of the ground-state flux diagram of three coupled qubits as a first step towards the demonstration of adiabatic quantum computation
The ground state susceptibility of a system consisting of three flux-qubits
was measured in the complete three dimensional flux space around the common
degeneracy point of the qubits. The system's Hamiltonian could be completely
reconstructed from measurements made far away from the common degeneracy point.
The subsequent measurements made around this point show complete agreement with
the theoretical predictions which follow from this Hamiltonian. The ground
state anti-crossings of the system could be read-out directly from these
measurements. This allows one to determine the ground-state flux diagram, which
provides the solution for the non-polynomial optimization problem MAXCUT
encoded in the Hamiltonian of the three-flux-qubit system. Our results show
that adiabatic quantum computation can be demonstrated with this system
provided that the energy gap and/or the speed of the read-out is increased.Comment: accepted for publication by Europhysics Letter
- …