Observation of two-mode squeezing in a traveling wave parametric amplifier

  1. Martina Esposito,
  2. Arpit Ranadive,
  3. Luca Planat,
  4. Sebastian Leger,
  5. Dorian Fraudet,
  6. Vincent Jouanny,
  7. Olivier Buisson,
  8. Wiebke Guichard,
  9. Cécile Naud,
  10. José Aumentado,
  11. Florent Lecocq,
  12. and Nicolas Roch
Traveling wave parametric amplifiers (TWPAs) have recently emerged as essential tools for broadband near quantum-limited amplification. However, their use to generate microwave quantum

A reversed Kerr traveling wave parametric amplifier

  1. Arpit Ranadive,
  2. Martina Esposito,
  3. Luca Planat,
  4. Edgar Bonet,
  5. Cécile Naud,
  6. Olivier Buisson,
  7. Wiebke Guichard,
  8. and Nicolas Roch
Traveling wave parametric amplification in a nonlinear medium provides broadband quantum-noise limited gain and is a remarkable resource for the detection of electromagnetic radiation.

Probing a transmon qubit via the ultra-strong coupling to a Josephson waveguide

  1. Javier Puertas Martinez,
  2. Sebastien Leger,
  3. Nicolas Gheereart,
  4. Remy Dassonneville,
  5. Luca Planat,
  6. Farshad Foroughi,
  7. Yuriy Krupko,
  8. Olivier Buisson,
  9. Cecile Naud,
  10. Wiebke Guichard,
  11. Serge Florens,
  12. Izak Snyman,
  13. and Nicolas Roch
Exploring the quantum world often starts by drawing a sharp boundary between a microscopic subsystem and the bath to which it is invariably coupled. In most cases, knowledge of the

A tunable Josephson platform to explore many-body quantum optics in circuit-QED

  1. Javier Puertas Martinez,
  2. Sebastien Leger,
  3. Nicolas Gheeraert,
  4. Remy Dassonneville,
  5. Luca Planat,
  6. Farshad Foroughi,
  7. Yuriy Krupko,
  8. Olivier Buisson,
  9. Cecile Naud,
  10. Wiebke Guichard,
  11. Serge Florens,
  12. Izak Snyman,
  13. and Nicolas Roch
The quest to understand interaction between light and matter stretches back to the ray optics of Euclid and Ptolemy. In recent decades, studies at the quantum scale were performed by

Unexpectedly allowed transition in two inductively coupled transmons

  1. Étienne Dumur,
  2. Bruno Küng,
  3. Alexey Feofanov,
  4. Thomas Weißl,
  5. Yuriy Krupko,
  6. Nicolas Roch,
  7. Cécile Naud,
  8. Wiebke Guichard,
  9. and Olivier Buisson
We present experimental results in which the unexpected zero-two transition of a circuit composed of two inductively coupled transmons is observed. This transition shows an unusual