Optical lithography implementation of a non-degenerate parametric amplifier based on two coupled Josephson junction arrays

ORAL

Abstract

Quantum-limited amplification is a prerequisite for the implementation of state-of-the-art quantum information processing schemes with superconducting quantum bits. We present the implementation of a parametric amplifier which consists of two identical, capacitively coupled Josephson junction array resonators, referred to as Dimer Josephson Junction Array Amplifier (DJJAA). The Josephson Junction arrays are sufficiently long (103 junctions) that several eigenmodes are found on the linear part of the dispersion relation and can be used for amplification. Due to the shared coupling capacitance between the arrays, their spectra hybridize to symmetric and antisymmetric pairs of modes [Eichler et al., PRL 113 (2014)], with a level splitting up to several hundreds of MHz. We observe non-degenerate amplification in excess of 20 dB, instantaneous bandwidth of approx. 10 MHz, 1 GHz frequency tunability, and dynamic range exceeding the single-photon regime. All structures are fabricated using standard two step optical lithography, making the DJJAA fabrication procedure easily accessible to a wide community.

*This work was supported by the French Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR CLOUD project No. ANR-16-CE24-0005), the University Grenoble Alpes AGIR, and the Humboldt Foundation.

Presenters

  • Patrick Winkel

    • Karlsruhe Institut of Technology

Authors

  • Patrick Winkel

    • Karlsruhe Institut of Technology
  • Ivan Takmakov

    • Karlsruhe Institut of Technology
  • Luca Planat

    • Institut Néel, University Grenoble Alpes
    • Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Grenoble INP, Institut Néel
    • Physics, University Grenoble Alpes-Neel Institute
    • Universite Grenoble Alpes
  • Nataliya Maleeva

    • Karlsruhe Inst of Tech
    • Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
    • Physikalisches Institute, Karlsruhe Inst of Tech
    • Karlsruhe Institut of Technology
  • Alexey Ustinov

    • Institute of Physics, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
    • Karlsruhe Inst of Tech
    • Karlsruhe Institut of Technology
  • Wolfgang Wernsdorfer

    • Karlsruhe Institut of Technology
  • Ioan-Mihai Pop

    • Karlsruhe Inst of Tech
    • Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
    • Physikalisches Institute, Karlsruhe Inst of Tech
    • Physikalisches Institut, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
    • Karlsruhe Institut of Technology
    • Physikalishes Institut, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
  • Nicolas Roch

    • Institut Néel, University Grenoble Alpes
    • Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Grenoble INP, Institut Néel
    • CNRS-Neel Institute
    • Universite Grenoble Alpes