Near-ideal Microwave Photon to Electron Conversion in a High Impedance Quantum Circuit

  1. Ognjen Stanisavljević,
  2. Jean-Côme Philippe,
  3. Julien Gabelli,
  4. Marco Aprili,
  5. Jérôme Estève,
  6. and Julien Basset
Photoelectric detectors cover a wide frequency spectrum spanning from the far ultraviolet to the infrared light with high sensitivity, large quantum efficiency and low dark current.
The equivalent photoelectric detection of microwave frequency photons has remained elusive due to inherent differences between microwave photon energy and the interband transition energies exploited in standard photoelectric detectors. Here we present the realization of a near-ideal microwave photon to electron converter at a frequency typical of circuit quantum electrodynamics. These unique properties are enabled by the use of a high kinetic inductance disordered superconductor, granular aluminium, to enhance the light-matter interaction. This experiment constitutes an important proof of concept regarding low energy microwave photon to electron conversion unveiling new possibilities such as the detection of single microwave photons using charge detection. It finds significance in quantum research openning doors to a wide array of applications, from quantum-enhanced sensing to exploring the fundamental properties of quantum states.

Quantum bath engineering of a high impedance microwave mode through quasiparticle tunneling

  1. Gianluca Aiello,
  2. Mathieu Féchant,
  3. Alexis Morvan,
  4. Julien Basset,
  5. Marco Aprili,
  6. Julien Gabelli,
  7. and Jérôme Estève
We demonstrate a new approach to dissipation engineering in microwave quantum optics. For a single mode, dissipation usually corresponds to quantum jumps, where photons are lost one
by one. Here, we are able to tune the minimal number of lost photons per jump to be two (or more) with a simple dc voltage. As a consequence, different quantum states experience different dissipation. Causality implies that the states must also experience different energy shifts. Our measurements of these Lamb shifts are in good agreement with the predictions of the Kramers-Kronig relations for single quantum states in a regime of highly non-linear bath coupling. This work opens new possibilities for quantum state manipulation in circuit QED, without relying on the Josephson effect.