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Ultrastrong light-matter interaction in a photonic crystal waveguide

ORAL

Abstract

The superconducting quantum circuits platform has developed into a rich playground for building synthetic quantum materials composed of interacting microwave excitations. In this work, we apply this toolbox for exploring the physics of an artificial atom coupled to the many modes of a photonic crystal. Recently, strongly coupling a transmon qubit to the band structure of a stepped impedance waveguide has led to the first observation of atom-photon dressed bound states. In this experiment, we use an emitter with a higher nonlinearity and push the coupling strength beyond the single-photon regime. Our platform consists of a fluxonium qubit galvanically coupled to a linear chain of microwave resonators. Transport measurements reveal how the propagation of a single photon becomes a many-body problem as multi-photon bound states participate in the scattering dynamics. The effective photon-photon interactions induced by the impurity emerge as we measure the inelastic scattering spectrum. Furthermore, we probe signatures of multi-mode entanglement from measured correlations in the emitted quadrature fields. This work opens a new avenue for future explorations in many-body quantum optics.

Presenters

  • Andrei Vrajitoarea

    Princeton University, University of Chicago

Authors

  • Andrei Vrajitoarea

    Princeton University, University of Chicago

  • Ron Belyansky

    University of Maryland, College Park

  • Rex O Lundgren

    University of Maryland, College Park

  • Seth P Whitsitt

    National Institute of Standards and Technology

  • Alexey V Gorshkov

    JQI, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Joint Quantum Institute and Joint Center for Quantum Information and Computer Science, University of Maryland and NIST, College Park, MD 20742 USA, JQI, NIST, QuICS and Department of Physics, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742;, Joint Quantum Institute, NIST/University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742 USA

  • Andrew Houck

    Princeton University