Strong Coupling between a Superconducting Circuit, Phonon, and Electron Spin via a Piezomechanical Nanocavity

ORAL

Abstract

A central goal in quantum information science is to exchange quantum information between different physical modalities, a process known as quantum transduction. This goal is urgently pursued in the context of microwave-to-optical transduction, which has applications in quantum networking. Recent work has considered highly efficient acoustic coupling via a phononic bus from microwave superconducting circuits (SCs) to a diamond color center, which is a near-unity spin-photon interface. However, transduction via traveling acoustic waves requires engineering a complex single mode-to-multimode-to-single mode interaction. Here, we theoretically show that it is possible to achieve strong coupling of a single acoustic mode of a Lamb wave-like resonator to both a SC mode and a single diamond electron spin. Based on this ability, we introduce a superconductor-phonon-spin transducer (SPST) that simultaneously achieves > 10 MHz coupling rates to both modes, allowing it to act as a mediary in deterministic microwave-to-spin transduction. Finally, we discuss the applications of an SPST in high-density, optically addressable quantum memory registers and superconducting-spin interconnects to a quantum network.

*Hamza Raniwala acknowledges funding from the NDSEG fellowship. Hamza Raniwala and Stefan Krastanov acknowledge funding from the MITRE Corporation and the NSF Center for Ultracold Atoms. Matthew Trusheim acknowledges support from the Army Research Office. Matt Eichenfield and Lisa Hackett acknowledge support from Sandia National Laboratories

Publication: Planned paper: H. Raniwala, S. Krastanov, L. Hackett, M. Eichenfield, D. Englund, and M. Trusheim, Spin-Phonon-Photon Strong Coupling in a Piezomechanical Nanocavity.

Presenters

  • Hamza H Raniwala

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Hamza H Raniwala

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Stefan Krastanov

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Lisa Hackett

    • Sandia National Laboratories
  • Matt Eichenfield

    • Sandia National Laboratories
  • Dirk Englund

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • MIT
    • Columbia Univ
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technolog
  • Matthew Trusheim

    • Harvard University