An entangled quantum state of two or more particles or objects exhibits some of the most peculiar features of quantum mechanics. Entangled systems cannot be described independentlyof each other even though they may have an arbitrarily large spatial separation. Reconciling this property with the inherent uncertainty in quantum states is at the heart of some of the most famous debates in the development of quantum theory. Nonetheless, entanglement nowadays has a solid theoretical and experimental foundation, and it is the crucial resource behind many emerging quantum technologies. Entanglement has been demonstrated for microscopic systems, such as with photons, ions, and electron spins, and more recently in microwave and electromechanical devices. For macroscopic objects, however, entanglement becomes exceedingly fragile towards environmental disturbances. A major outstanding goal has been to create and verify the entanglement between the motional states of slowly-moving massive objects. Here, we carry out such an experimental demonstration, with the moving bodies realized as two micromechanical oscillators coupled to a microwave-frequency electromagnetic cavity that is used to create and stabilise the entanglement of the centre-of-mass motion of the oscillators. We infer the existence of entanglement in the steady state by combining measurement of correlated mechanical fluctuations with an analysis of the microwaves emitted from the cavity. Our work qualitatively extends the range of entangled physical systems, with implications in quantum information processing, precision measurement, and tests of the limits of quantum mechanics.
The standard quantum limit constrains the precision of an oscillator position measurement. It arises from a balance between the imprecision and the quantum back-action of the measurement.However, a measurement of only a single quadrature of the oscillator can evade the back-action and be made with arbitrary precision. Here we demonstrate quantum back-action evading measurements of a collective quadrature of two mechanical oscillators, both coupled to a common microwave cavity. The work allows for quantum state tomography of two mechanical oscillators, and provides a foundation for macroscopic mechanical entanglement and force sensing beyond conventional quantum limits.
High-gain amplifiers of electromagnetic signals operating near the quantum limit are crucial for quantum information systems and ultrasensitive quantum measurements. However, the existingtechniques have a limited gain-bandwidth product and only operate with weak input signals. Here we demonstrate a two-port optomechanical scheme for amplification and routing of microwave signals, a system that simultaneously performs high-gain amplification and frequency conversion in the quantum regime. Our amplifier, implemented in a two-cavity microwave optomechanical device, shows 41 dB of gain and has a high dynamic range, handling input signals up to 1013 photons per second, three orders of magnitude more than corresponding Josephson parametric amplifiers. We show that although the active medium, the mechanical resonator, is at a high temperature far from the quantum limit, only 4.6 quanta of noise is added to the input signal. Our method can be readily applied to a wide variety of optomechanical systems, including hybrid optical-microwave systems, creating a universal hub for signals at the quantum level.
Coupling electromagnetic waves in a cavity and mechanical vibrations via the radiation pressure of the photons is a promising platform for investigations of quantum mechanical propertiesof motion of macroscopic bodies and thereby the limits of quantum mechanics [3,4]. A drawback is that the effect of one photon tends to be tiny, and hence one of the pressing challenges is to substantially increase the interaction strength towards the scale of the cavity damping rate. A novel scenario is to introduce into the setup a quantum two-level system (qubit), which, besides strengthening the coupling, allows for rich physics via strongly enhanced nonlinearities [5-8]. Addressing these issues, here we present a design of cavity optomechanics in the microwave frequency regime involving a Josephson junction qubit. We demonstrate boosting of the radiation pressure interaction energy by six orders of magnitude, allowing to approach the strong coupling regime, where a single quantum of vibrations shifts the cavity frequency by more than its linewidth. We observe nonlinear phenomena at single-photon energies, such as an enhanced damping due to the two-level system. This work opens up nonlinear cavity optomechanics as a plausible tool for the study of quantum properties of motion.
Superconducting circuits with Josephson junctions are promising candidates
for developing future quantum technologies. Of particular interest is to use
these circuits to study effectsthat typically occur in complex
condensed-matter systems. Here, we employ a superconducting quantum bit
(qubit), a transmon, to carry out an analog simulation of motional averaging, a
phenomenon initially observed in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy.
To realize this effect, the flux bias of the transmon is modulated by a
controllable pseudo-random telegraph noise, resulting in stochastic jumping of
the energy separation between two discrete values. When the jumping is faster
than a dynamical threshold set by the frequency displacement of the levels, the
two separated spectral lines merge into a single narrow-width,
motional-averaged line. With sinusoidal modulation a complex pattern of
additional sidebands is observed. We demonstrate experimentally that the
modulated system remains quantum coherent, with modified transition
frequencies, Rabi couplings, and dephasing rates. These results represent the
first steps towards more advanced quantum simulations using artificial atoms.