Measurement of microwave photon correlations at millikelvin with a thermal detector

ORAL

Abstract

Microwave photons are important carriers of quantum information in many promising platforms for quantum computing. They can be routinely generated, controlled, and teleported in experiments, indicating a variety of applications in quantum technology. However, observation of quantum statistical properties of microwave photons remains demanding: The energy of several microwave photons is considerably smaller than the thermal fluctuation of any room-temperature detector, while amplification necessarily induces noise. Here, we present a measurement technique with a nanobolometer that directly measures the photon statistics at the millikelvin temperature and overcomes this trade-off. We apply our method to thermal states generated by a blackbody radiator operating in the regime of circuit quantum electrodynamics. We demonstrate the photon number resolvedness of the nanobolometer, and reveal the n(n+1)-scaling law of the photon number variance as indicated by the Bose--Einstein distribution. By engineering the coherent and incoherent proportions of the input field, we observe the transition between super-Poissonian and Poissonian statistics of the microwave photons from the bolometric second-order correlation measurement. This technique is poised to serve in fundamental tests of quantum mechanics with microwave photons and function as a scalable readout solution for a quantum information processor.

*This work is supported by the Academy of Finland Centre of Excellence program (No. 336810), European Research Council under Advanced Grant ConceptQ (No. 101053801), Business Finland through Quantum Technologies Industrial (QuTI) project (No. 41419/31/2020), Technology Industries of Finland Centennial Foundation, Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation through Future Makers program, Finnish Foundation for Technology Promotion (No. 8640), and Horizon Europe programme HORIZON-CL4-2022-QUANTUM-01-SGA via the project 101113946 OpenSuperQPlus100.

Publication: arXiv:2407.05147

Presenters

  • Qi-Ming Chen

    • QCD Labs, QTF Centre of Excellence, Aalto University

Authors

  • Qi-Ming Chen

    • QCD Labs, QTF Centre of Excellence, Aalto University
  • Aarne Keränen

    • QCD Labs, QTF Centre of Excellence, Aalto University
  • András M Gunyhó

    • QCD Labs, QTF Centre of Excellence, Aalto University
    • Aalto University
  • Priyank Singh

    • QCD Labs, QTF Centre of Excellence, Aalto University
    • Aalto University
  • Jian Ma

    • QCD Labs, QTF Centre of Excellence, Aalto University
    • Aalto University
  • Joonas Govenius

    • VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland Ltd.
    • VTT
  • Visa I Vesterinen

    • VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland Ltd.
  • Mikko Möttönen

    • QCD Labs, QTF Centre of Excellence, Aalto University
    • Aalto University