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Photon-blockade breakdown as a first-order dissipative phase transition in zero dimension

ORAL

Abstract

I present the recent concept of first-order dissipative phase transitions, that can occur in meso- and even microscopic quantum systems. One of the first examples of this phenomenon was the photon-blockade breakdown (PBB) effect. It occurs most simply in the driven-dissipative Jaynes-Cummings model describing the prototypical cavity QED scenario: a coupled system of a bosonic mode and a qubit.

For PBB, an abstract thermodynamic limit has been identified [1], where the coupling g between the subsystems goes to infinity without affecting the system size (hence the designation zero-dimensional), and this limit was studied in a finite-size scaling approach [2], with scaling exponents determined numerically. I discuss the microscopic mechanism and the fully quantum solution, and assess the connection with optical bistability via the neo- and semiclassical models.

I describe the experimental studies: PBB was first observed in a circuit QED system [3], and the thermodynamic limit could also be modeled on this platform with a bespoke device [4]. Even though the system remains microscopic, its behavior becomes increasingly macroscopic as a function of g/κ (κ – resonator linewidth). For the highest realized g/κ≈287, the system switches with a characteristic timescale as long as 6 s between a bright coherent state with approximately 104 intracavity photons and the vacuum state. This exceeds the microscopic timescales by 6 orders of magnitude.

The numerical modelling [5] of this latter set of experiments highlighted the role of the higher lying transmon levels and the phase noise.

Publication: [1] H. J. Carmichael, Phys. Rev. X 5, 031028 (2015).<br>[2] A. Vukics, A. Dombi, J. M. Fink, P. Domokos, Quantum 3, 150 (2019).<br>[3] J. M. Fink, A. Dombi, A. Vukics, A. Wallraff, and P. Domokos, Phys. Rev. X 7, 011012 (2017).<br>[4] R. Sett, F. Hassani, D. Phan, Sh. Barzanjeh, A. Vukics, and J. M. Fink, arXiv:2210.14182 (2022) – accepted to PRX Quantum<br>[5] https://github.com/vukics/cppqed

Presenters

  • András Vukics

    HUN-REN Wigner Research Centre for Physics

Authors

  • Riya Sett

    Institute of Science and Technology (IST) Austria

  • Peter Domokos

    HUN-REN Wigner Research Centre for Physics

  • Johannes M Fink

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria

  • András Vukics

    HUN-REN Wigner Research Centre for Physics