Atomic physics and quantum optics using circuits: An overview of recent results on superconducting qubits

COFFEE_KLATCH  · Invited

Abstract

Superconducting (SC) circuits can behave like atoms making transitions between a few energy levels. Such circuits can test quantum mechanics at macroscopic scales and be used to conduct atomic-physics experiments on a silicon chip. This presentation overviews a few of our theoretical studies on SC circuits and quantum information processing including: SC qubits for photon generation and for lasing; 2-1 photon coexistence; cooling qubits and their environment; using SC qubits to probe nearby defects; hybrid circuits involving both charge and flux qubits; quantum tomography in SC circuits; preparation of macroscopic quantum superposition states of a cavity field via coupling to a SC qubit; generation of nonclassical photon states using a SC qubit in a microcavity; cluster states; using these circuits as quantum analog emulators of Kitaev lattices; controllable scattering of photons inside a one-dimensional resonator waveguide; and controllable couplings among qubits.

*This work was supported by RIKEN's Advanced Science Institute, the National Security Agency, the Laboratory for Physical Sciences, the Army Research Office, and the National Science Foundation.

Authors

  • Franco Nori

    • RIKEN Advanced Science Institute, and the University of Michigan
    • Physics Department, University of Michigan
    • RIKEN Advanced Science Institute
    • RIKEN
    • Riken and University of Michigan