Input-output theory for waveguide QED with an ensemble of inhomogeneous atoms

  1. Kevin Lalumière,
  2. Barry C. Sanders,
  3. Arjan F. van Loo,
  4. Arkady Fedorov,
  5. Andreas Wallraff,
  6. and Alexandre Blais
We study the collective effects that emerge in waveguide quantum electrodynamics where several (artificial) atoms are coupled to a one-dimensional (1D) superconducting transmission
line. Since single microwave photons can travel without loss for a long distance along the line, real and virtual photons emitted by one atom can be reabsorbed or scattered by a second atom. Depending on the distance between the atoms, this collective effect can lead to super- and subradiance or to a coherent exchange-type interaction between the atoms. Changing the artificial atoms transition frequencies, something which can be easily done with superconducting qubits (two levels artificial atoms), is equivalent to changing the atom-atom separation and thereby opens the possibility to study the characteristics of these collective effects. To study this waveguide quantum electrodynamics system, we extend previous work and present an effective master equation valid for an ensemble of inhomogeneous atoms. Using input-output theory, we compute analytically and numerically the elastic and inelastic scattering and show how these quantities reveal information about collective effects. These theoretical results are compatible with recent experimental results using transmon qubits coupled to a superconducting one-dimensional transmission line [A.F. van Loo {\it et al.} (2013)].

Collective Suppression of Linewidths in Circuit QED

  1. Felix Nissen,
  2. Johannes M. Fink,
  3. Jonas A. Mlynek,
  4. Andreas Wallraff,
  5. and Jonathan Keeling
We report the experimental observation, and a theoretical explanation, of collective suppression of linewidths for multiple superconducting qubits coupled to a good cavity. This demonstrates
how strong qubit-cavity coupling can significantly modify the dephasing and dissipation processes that might be expected for individual qubits, and can potentially improve coherence times in many-body circuit QED.

Demonstrating W-type Entanglement of Dicke-States in Resonant Cavity Quantum Electrodynamics

  1. Jonas A. Mlynek,
  2. Abdufarrukh A. Abdumalikov Jr,
  3. Johannes M. Fink,
  4. Lars Steffen,
  5. Matthias Baur,
  6. Christian Lang,
  7. Arjan F. van Loo,
  8. and Andreas Wallraff
Nonlinearity and entanglement are two important properties by which physical systems can be identified as non-classical. We study the dynamics of the resonant interaction of up to N=3
two-level systems and a single mode of the electromagnetic field sharing a single excitation dynamically. We observe coherent vacuum Rabi oscillations and their nonlinear speed up by tracking the populations of all qubits and the resonator in time. We use quantum state tomography to show explicitly that the dynamics generates maximally entangled states of the W class in a time limited only by the collective interaction rate. We use an entanglement witness and the threetangle to characterize the state whose fidelity F=78% is limited in our experiments by crosstalk arising during the simultaneous qubit manipulations which is absent in a sequential approach with F=91%.