Probing nonlinear photon scattering with artificial atoms coupled to a slow-light waveguide
ORAL
Abstract
Engineering the electromagnetic environment of a quantum emitter makes it possible to observe a plethora of exotic physical phenomena involving atom-light interactions. In particular, coupling quantum emitters to a finite-band waveguide, leads to the formation of long-lived atom-photon bound states with energy outside the photonic band, recently observed in experiments. Here, going beyond linear optics response, we experimentally probe these bound states through a nonlinear scattering process.
Our slow light waveguide consists of an array of compact, high-impedance superconducting resonators forming in a 1GHz-wide pass band. We couple two frequency-tunable transmon qubits to the array and study their interaction with this engineered environment. By sending multiphoton coherent packets into the waveguide, we demonstrate the excitation of atom-photon bound states through a nonlinear process, which allows on-demand trapping and releasing of the excitation.
This experiment opens novel perspectives for routing and controlling photon transport at the quantum level.
Our slow light waveguide consists of an array of compact, high-impedance superconducting resonators forming in a 1GHz-wide pass band. We couple two frequency-tunable transmon qubits to the array and study their interaction with this engineered environment. By sending multiphoton coherent packets into the waveguide, we demonstrate the excitation of atom-photon bound states through a nonlinear process, which allows on-demand trapping and releasing of the excitation.
This experiment opens novel perspectives for routing and controlling photon transport at the quantum level.
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Presenters
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Marco Scigliuzzo
- Department of Microtechnology and Nanoscience, Chalmers University of Technology
- Chalmers Univ of Tech