Two-color electromagnetically induced transparency via modulated coupling between a mechanical resonator and a qubit

  1. Xin Wang,
  2. Adam Miranowicz,
  3. Hong-Rong Li,
  4. Fu-Li Li,
  5. and Franco Nori
We discuss level splitting and sideband transitions induced by a modulated coupling between a superconducting quantum circuit and a nanomechanical resonator. First, we show how to achieve

PT-symmetric circuit-QED

  1. Fernando Quijandría,
  2. Uta Naether,
  3. Sahin K. Özdemir,
  4. Franco Nori,
  5. and David Zueco
The Hermiticity axiom of quantum mechanics guarantees that the energy spectrum is real and the time evolution is unitary (probability-preserving). Nevertheless, non-Hermitian but -symmetric

Microwave photonics with superconducting quantum circuits

  1. Xiu Gu,
  2. Anton Frisk Kockum,
  3. Adam Miranowicz,
  4. Yu-xi Liu,
  5. and Franco Nori
In the past 20 years, impressive progress has been made both experimentally and theoretically in superconducting quantum circuits, which provide a platform for manipulating microwave

Quantum Nonlinear Optics without Photons

  1. Roberto Stassi,
  2. Vincenzo Macrì,
  3. Anton Frisk Kockum,
  4. Omar Di Stefano,
  5. Adam Miranowicz,
  6. Salvatore Savasta,
  7. and Franco Nori
Spontaneous parametric down-conversion is a well-known process in quantum nonlinear optics in which a photon incident on a nonlinear crystal spontaneously splits into two photons. Here

Hybrid quantum device with a carbon nanotube and a flux qubit for dissipative quantum engineering

  1. Xin Wang,
  2. Adam Miranowicz,
  3. Hong-Rong Li,
  4. and Franco Nori
We describe a hybrid quantum system composed of a micrometer-size carbon nanotube (CNT) longitudinally coupled to a flux qubit. We demonstrate the usefulness of this device for generating

Superradiance with an ensemble of superconducting flux qubits

  1. Neill Lambert,
  2. Yuichiro Matsuzaki,
  3. Kosuke Kakuyanagi,
  4. Natsuko Ishida,
  5. Shiro Saito,
  6. and Franco Nori
Superconducting flux qubits are a promising candidate for realizing quantum information processing and quantum simulations. Such devices behave like artificial atoms, with the advantage

Multi-output microwave single-photon source using superconducting circuits with longitudinal and transverse couplings

  1. Xin Wang,
  2. Adam Miranowicz,
  3. Hong-Rong Li,
  4. and Franco Nori
Single-photon devices at microwave frequencies are important for applications in quantum information processing and communication in the microwave regime. In this work, we describe

Method for identifying electromagnetically induced transparency in a tunable circuit quantum electrodynamics system

  1. Qi-Chun Liu,
  2. Tie-Fu Li,
  3. Xiao-Qing Luo,
  4. Hu Zhao,
  5. Wei Xiong,
  6. Ying-Shan Zhang,
  7. Zhen Chen,
  8. J. S. Liu,
  9. Wei Chen,
  10. Franco Nori,
  11. J. S. Tsai,
  12. and J. Q. You
Electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) has been realized in atomic systems, but fulfilling the EIT conditions for artificial atoms made from superconducting circuits is a more

Method for observing robust and tunable phonon blockade in a nanomechanical resonator coupled to a charge qubit

  1. Xin Wang,
  2. Adam Miranowicz,
  3. Hong-Rong Li,
  4. and Franco Nori
Phonon blockade is a purely quantum phenomenon, analogous to Coulomb and photon blockades, in which a single phonon in an anharmonic mechanical resonator can impede the excitation of

Multi-photon sideband transitions in an ultrastrongly-coupled circuit quantum electrodynamics system

  1. Zhen Chen,
  2. Yimin Wang,
  3. Tiefu Li,
  4. Lin Tian,
  5. Yueyin Qiu,
  6. Kunihiro Inomata,
  7. Fumiki Yoshihara,
  8. Siyuan Han,
  9. Franco Nori,
  10. J. S. Tsai,
  11. and J. Q. You
Ultrastrong coupling in circuit quantum electrodynamics systems not only provides a platform to study the quantum Rabi model, but it can also facilitate the implementation of quantum