Besides the conventional transverse couplings between superconducting qubits
(SQs) and electromagnetic fields, there are additional longitudinal couplings
when the inversion symmetry of the potential energies of the SQs is broken. We
study nonclassical-state generation in a SQ which is driven by a classical
field and coupled to a single-mode microwave field. We find that the classical
field can induce transitions between two energy levels of the SQs, which either
generate or annihilate, in a controllable way, different photon numbers of the
cavity field. The effective Hamiltonians of these classical-field-assisted
multiphoton processes of the single-mode cavity field are very similar to those
for cold ions, confined to a coaxial RF-ion trap and driven by a classical
field. We show that arbitrary superpositions of Fock states can be more
efficiently generated using these controllable multiphoton transitions, in
contrast to the single-photon resonant transition when there is only a SQ-field
transverse coupling. The experimental feasibility for different SQs is also
discussed.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figure