Emergence of nonlinear friction from quantum fluctuations
Nonlinear damping, a force of friction that depends on the amplitude of motion, plays an important role in many electrical, mechanical and even biological oscillators. In novel technologies such as carbon nanotubes, graphene membranes or superconducting resonators, the origin of nonlinear damping is sometimes unclear. This presents a problem, as the damping rate is a key figure of merit in the application of these systems to extremely precise sensors or quantum computers. Through measurements of a superconducting circuit, we show that nonlinear damping can emerge as a direct consequence of quantum fluctuations and the conservative nonlinearity of a Josephson junction. The phenomenon can be understood and visualized through the flow of quasi-probability in phase space, and accurately describes our experimental observations. Crucially, the effect is not restricted to superconducting circuits: we expect that quantum fluctuations or other sources of noise give rise to nonlinear damping in other systems with a similar conservative nonlinearity, such as nano-mechanical oscillators or even macroscopic systems.