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Superconducting Qubits
Quantum Simulation
Inelastic scattering of a photon by a quantum phase-slip
arXiv
Authors: Roman Kuzmin, Nicholas Grabon, Nitish Mehta, Amir Burshtein, Moshe Goldstein, Manuel Houzet, Leonid I. Glazman, Vladimir E. Manucharyan
Year
2020
Paper ID
20210
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
121
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Spontaneous decay of a single photon is a notoriously inefficient process in nature irrespective of the frequency range. We report that a quantum phase-slip fluctuation in high-impedance superconducting waveguides can split a single incident microwave photon into a large number of lower-energy photons with a near unit probability. The underlying inelastic photon-photon interaction has no analogs in non-linear optics. Instead, the measured decay rates are explained without adjustable parameters in the framework of a new model of a quantum impurity in a Luttinger liquid. Our result connects circuit quantum electrodynamics to critical phenomena in two-dimensional boundary quantum field theories, important in the physics of strongly-correlated systems. The photon lifetime data represents a rare example of verified and useful quantum many-body simulation.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum Simulation research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2020 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Spontaneous decay of a single photon is a notoriously inefficient process in nature irrespective of the frequency range.
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