1,739 research outputs found
Initialization by measurement of a two-qubit superconducting circuit
We demonstrate initialization by joint measurement of two transmon qubits in
3D circuit quantum electrodynamics. Homodyne detection of cavity transmission
is enhanced by Josephson parametric amplification to discriminate the two-qubit
ground state from single-qubit excitations non-destructively and with 98.1%
fidelity. Measurement and postselection of a steady-state mixture with 4.7%
residual excitation per qubit achieve 98.8% fidelity to the ground state, thus
outperforming passive initialization.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, and Supplementary Information (7 figures, 1
table
From Cavity Electromechanics to Cavity Optomechanics
We present an overview of experimental work to embed high-Q mesoscopic
mechanical oscillators in microwave and optical cavities. Based upon recent
progress, the prospect for a broad field of "cavity quantum mechanics" is very
real. These systems introduce mesoscopic mechanical oscillators as a new
quantum resource and also inherently couple their motion to photons throughout
the electromagnetic spectrum.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, ICAP proceedings submissio
Strongly quadrature-dependent noise in superconducting micro-resonators measured at the vacuum-noise limit
We measure frequency- and dissipation-quadrature noise in superconducting
lithographed microwave resonators with sensitivity near the vacuum noise level
using a Josephson parametric amplifier. At an excitation power of 100~nW, these
resonators show significant frequency noise caused by two-level systems. No
excess dissipation-quadrature noise (above the vacuum noise) is observed to our
measurement sensitivity. These measurements demonstrate that the excess
dissipation-quadrature noise is negligible compared to vacuum fluctuations, at
typical readout powers used in micro-resonator applications. Our results have
important implications for resonant readout of various devices such as
detectors, qubits and nano-mechanical oscillators.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Parametric coupling between macroscopic quantum resonators
Time-dependent linear coupling between macroscopic quantum resonator modes
generates both a parametric amplification also known as a {}"squeezing
operation" and a beam splitter operation, analogous to quantum optical systems.
These operations, when applied properly, can robustly generate entanglement and
squeezing for the quantum resonator modes. Here, we present such coupling
schemes between a nanomechanical resonator and a superconducting electrical
resonator using applied microwave voltages as well as between two
superconducting lumped-element electrical resonators using a r.f.
SQUID-mediated tunable coupler. By calculating the logarithmic negativity of
the partially transposed density matrix, we quantitatively study the
entanglement generated at finite temperatures. We also show that
characterization of the nanomechanical resonator state after the quantum
operations can be achieved by detecting the electrical resonator only. Thus,
one of the electrical resonator modes can act as a probe to measure the
entanglement of the coupled systems and the degree of squeezing for the other
resonator mode.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, submitte
- …