or a combination of
refrigeration and laser-like cooling"][2, 3]. This exciting result has
encouraged notions that mechanical oscillators may perform useful functions in
the processing of quantum information with superconducting circuits [1, 4-7],
either by serving as a quantum memory for the ephemeral state of a microwave
field or by providing a quantum interface between otherwise incompatible
systems [8, 9]. As yet, the transfer of an itinerant state or propagating mode
of a microwave field to and from a mechanical oscillator has not been
demonstrated owing to the inability to agilely turn on and off the interaction
between microwave electricity and mechanical motion. Here we demonstrate that
the state of an itinerant microwave field can be coherently transferred into,
stored in, and retrieved from a mechanical oscillator with amplitudes at the
single quanta level. Crucially, the time to capture and to retrieve the
microwave state is shorter than the quantum state lifetime of the mechanical
oscillator. In this quantum regime, the mechanical oscillator can both store
and transduce quantum information.
Initialization by measurement of a two-qubit superconducting circuit
We demonstrate initialization by joint measurement of two transmon qubits in
3D circuit quantum electrodynamics. Homodyne detection of cavity transmission
is enhanced by Josephson parametric
amplification to discriminate the two-qubit
ground state from single-qubit excitations non-destructively and with 98.1%
fidelity. Measurement and postselection of a steady-state mixture with 4.7%
residual excitation per qubit achieve 98.8% fidelity to the ground state, thus
outperforming passive initialization.