Observation of Photon Blockade in a Tavis-Cummings System Using Photon Number Resolving Spectroscopy
ORAL
Abstract
Photon blockade, where absorption of one photon prevents further photon absorption is an important form of photon-photon interaction that has been investigated in many physical platforms. In Jaynes-Cummings systems, the presence of a two-level quantum emitter can induce a photon blockade in a coupled linear cavity, an effect that has been observed in atomic, quantum dot, and superconducting circuit systems. We present analogous results on observing photon blockade in a Tavis-Cummings system consisting of many superconducting transmons serving as quantum emitters coupled to a coplanar waveguide cavity. We demonstrate the presence of blockade with one, two, and three transmons resonantly coupled to the cavity using photon number resolving spectroscopy as a probe of the cavity photon number distribution. By varying the transmon-cavity detuning we show the crossover from approximately Poissonian cavity photon number statistics to the blockade regime where photon numbers greater than one are heavily suppressed.
*This material was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research Quantum Testbed Program under contracts DE-AC02-05CH11231 and the UC Multicampus Research Programs and Initiatives of the University of California (Grant Number M23PL5936).
–
Publication: There is a planned paper titled "Observation of Photon Blockade in a Tavis-Cummings System" derived from this work.
Presenters
-
Brian Marinelli
- University of California, Berkeley