A Superconducting Single-Atom Phonon Laser
ORAL
Abstract
The development of quantum acoustics has enabled the cooling of mechanical objects to their quantum ground state, generation of mechanical Fock-states, and Schrodinger cat states. Such demonstrations have made mechanical resonators attractive candidates for quantum information processing, metrology, and macroscopic tests of quantum mechanics. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a direct quantum-acoustic equivalent of a single-atom laser. A single superconducting qubit coupled to a high-overtone bulk acoustic resonator is used to drive the onset of phonon lasing. We observe the absence of a sharp lower lasing threshold and characteristic upper lasing threshold, unique predictions of single-atom lasing. Lasing of an object with a 25 microgram mass represents a new regime of laser physics. It provides a possible tool for generating large amplitude coherent states in circuit quantum acoustodynamics, which is important for fundamental and quantum information applications.
*W.J.M.F and G.A.S. acknowledge support through the QUAKE project, project number 680.92.18.04, of the research programme Natuurkunde Vrije Programma's of the Dutch Research Council (NWO). C.A.P. acknowledges the support of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC). A.M and V.A.S.V.B. acknowledge financial support from the Contrat Triennal 2021-2023 Strasbourg Capitale Europeenne.
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Publication: C.A. Potts, W.J.M. Franse, V.A.S.V. Bittencourt, A. Metelmann, and G.A. Steele, A superconducting single-atom phonon laser, arXiv:2312,13948 (2023)
Presenters
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Victor Augusto S Bittencourt
- University of Strasbourg