Dynamical Exploration of Amplitude Bistability in Engineered Quantum Systems

  1. Andreas Angerer,
  2. Stefan Putz,
  3. Dmitry O. Krimer,
  4. Thomas Astner,
  5. Matthias Zens,
  6. Ralph Glattauer,
  7. Kirill Streltsov,
  8. William J. Munro,
  9. Kae Nemoto,
  10. Stefan Rotter,
  11. Jörg Schmiedmayer,
  12. and Johannes Majer
Nonlinear systems, whose outputs are not directly proportional to their inputs, are well known to exhibit many interesting and important phenomena which have profoundly changed our
technological landscape over the last 50 years. Recently the ability to engineer quantum metamaterials through hybridisation has allowed to explore these nonlinear effects in systems with no natural analogue. Here we investigate amplitude bistability, which is one of the most fundamental nonlinear phenomena, in a hybrid system composed of a superconducting resonator inductively coupled to an ensemble of nitrogen-vacancy centres. One of the exciting properties of this spin system is its extremely long spin life-time, more than ten orders of magnitude longer than other relevant timescales of the hybrid system. This allows us to dynamically explore this nonlinear regime of cavity quantum electrodynamics (cQED) and demonstrate a critical slowing down of the cavity population on the order of several tens of thousands of seconds – a timescale much longer than observed so far for this effect. Our results provide the foundation for future quantum technologies based on nonlinear phenomena.