Non-locally entangled microwave and micromechanical squeezed cats: a phase transition-based protocol
Electromechanical systems currently offer a path to engineering quantum
states of microwave and micromechanical modes that are of both fundamental and
applied interest. Particularly desirable, but not yet observed, are mechanical
states that exhibit entanglement, wherein non-classical correlations exist
between distinct modes; squeezing, wherein the quantum uncertainty of an
observable quantity is reduced below the standard quantum limit; and
Schr“odinger cats, wherein a single mode is cast in a quantum superposition of
macroscopically distinct classical states. Also, while most investigations of
electromechanical systems have focussed on single- or few-body scenarios, the
many-body regime remains virtually unexplored. In such a regime quantum phase
transitions naturally present themselves as a resource for quantum state
generation, thereby providing a route toward entangling a large number of
electromechanical systems in highly non-classical states. Here we show how to
use existing superconducting circuit technology to implement a (quasi) quantum
phase transition in an array of electromechanical systems such that
entanglement, squeezing, and Schr“odinger cats become simultaneously
observable across multiple microwave and micromechanical oscillators.