Probing the Tavis-Cummings level splitting with intermediate-scale superconducting circuits

ORAL

Abstract

We demonstrate the local control of up to eight two-level systems interacting strongly with a microwave cavity. Following calibration, the frequency of each individual two-level system (qubit) is tunable without influencing the others. Bringing the qubits one by one on resonance with the cavity, we observe the collective coupling strength of the qubit ensemble. The splitting scales up with the square root of the number of the qubits, being the hallmark of the Tavis-Cummings model. The local control circuitry causes a bypass shunting the resonator, and a Fano interference in the microwave readout, whose contribution can be calibrated away to recover the pure cavity spectrum. The simulator's attainable size of dressed states is limited by reduced signal visibility, and -if uncalibrated- by off-resonance shifts of sub-components. Our work demonstrates control and readout of quantum coherent mesoscopic multi-qubit system of intermediate scale under conditions of noise.

Presenters

  • Martin Weides

    School of Engineering, University of Glasgow, University of Glasgow

Authors

  • Martin Weides

    School of Engineering, University of Glasgow, University of Glasgow

  • Ping Yang

    Institute of Physics, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Jan David Brehm

    Institute of Physics, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Juha Leppaekangas

    Karlsruher Institut für Technologie, Institute of Physics, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Lingzhen Guo

    Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Light, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light

  • Michael Marthaler

    Theoretische Physik, Saarland University, Institute for Theoretical Condensed Matter physics, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Isabella Boventer

    Institute of Physics, University Mainz

  • Alexander Stehli

    Institute of Physics, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Tim Wolz

    Institute of Physics, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

  • Alexey Ustinov

    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Institute of Physics, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology