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Quantum enabled operation of a microwave-optics interface

ORAL

Abstract

Superconducting qubits and semiconductor spin systems are some of the most promising candidates for scalable, high clock speed quantum computing. Connecting many such microwave nodes to implement a high-density quantum network remains an open challenge. Since telecom wavelength light is the ideal choice to transfer quantum information at room temperature, there has been a lot of development in microwave-optical transduction. Nevertheless, quantum-limited coherent conversion remained elusive due to either low total efficiency or pump induced heating. We present a quantum-enabled interface between itinerant microwave and optical light. We use a pulsed electro-optic whispering gallery mode transducer to demonstrate nanosecond timescale control of the complex mode amplitude with an input added noise of only 0.16 (1.11) quanta for the microwave-to-optics (reverse) direction. Working close to unity cooperativity with all involved modes close to their quantum ground state, we observe not only laser cooling of a superconducting microwave mode but also parametrically amplified vacuum noise. This new field of quantum-limited microwave photonics offers many new possibilities ranging from multiplexed classical control to long distance quantum interconnects.

Publication: Pre-print arXiv:2107.08303

Presenters

  • Rishabh Sahu

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria

Authors

  • Rishabh Sahu

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria

  • William Hease

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria

  • Alfredo R Rueda Sanchez

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria

  • Georg Arnold

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria

  • Liu Qiu

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria

  • Johannes M Fink

    Institute of Science and Technology Austria