Measurement of the Crossover from Photon Ordering to Delocalization in a Driven-Dissipative Superconducting Resonator System

ORAL

Abstract

Sizeable photon-photon interactions in networks of nonlinear oscillators enable the study of strongly correlated photons in non-equilibrium quantum many-body systems. We present a system composed of two superconducting resonators, coupled nonlinearly by a superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID). By applying a parametrically modulated magnetic flux we control the linear photon hopping rate between the two resonators and its ratio with the cross-Kerr rate. When increasing the hopping rate we observe a fully controllable crossover in the spatial correlations of the photonic fields of the two resonators, from photon self-ordering to delocalization of photons. The presented parametric coupling scheme is intrinsically robust to frequency disorder and may therefore prove useful for realizing larger-scale resonator arrays, and in turn facilitate active control of extended correlated quantum gases for the purpose of emulating other less accessible quantum systems.

*This work is supported by the National Centre of Competence in Research "Quantum Science and Technology" (NCCR QSIT), a research instrument of the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) and by ETH Zurich. M. J. H. acknowledges support by the EPSRC under grant
No. EP/N009428/1.

Presenters

  • Michele Collodo

    • ETH Zurich
    • Department of Physics, ETH Zurich

Authors

  • Michele Collodo

    • ETH Zurich
    • Department of Physics, ETH Zurich
  • Anton Potocnik

    • Department of Physics, ETH Zurich
  • Simone Gasparinetti

    • ETH Zurich
    • Department of Physics, ETH Zurich
  • Jean-Claude Besse

    • ETH Zurich
    • Department of Physics, ETH Zurich
  • Marek Pechal

    • Applied Physics, Stanford University
    • Stanford University
    • Department of Physics, ETH Zurich
  • Mahdi Sameti

    • Institute of Photonics and Quantum Sciences, Heriot-Watt University Edinburgh
  • Michael J. Hartmann

    • Institute of Photonics and Quantum Sciences, Heriot-Watt University Edinburgh
  • Andreas Wallraff

    • ETH Zurich
    • Department of Physics, ETH Zurich
    • ETH Zürich
    • Department of Physics, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
  • Christopher Eichler

    • ETH Zurich
    • Department of Physics, ETH Zurich