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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing Superconducting Qubits

Microwave-to-optics conversion using a mechanical oscillator in its quantum groundstate

arXiv
Authors: Moritz Forsch, Robert Stockill, Andreas Wallucks, Igor Marinkovic, Claus Gärtner, Richard A. Norte, Frank van Otten, Andrea Fiore, Kartik Srinivasan, Simon Gröblacher

Year

2018

Paper ID

22620

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

187

Citations

N/A

Abstract

Conversion between signals in the microwave and optical domains is of great interest both for classical telecommunication, as well as for connecting future superconducting quantum computers into a global quantum network. For quantum applications, the conversion has to be both efficient, as well as operate in a regime of minimal added classical noise. While efficient conversion has been demonstrated using mechanical transducers, they have so far all operated with a substantial thermal noise background. Here, we overcome this limitation and demonstrate coherent conversion between GHz microwave signals and the optical telecom band with a thermal background of less than one phonon. We use an integrated, on-chip electro-opto-mechanical device that couples surface acoustic waves driven by a resonant microwave signal to an optomechanical crystal featuring a 2.7 GHz mechanical mode. We initialize the mechanical mode in its quantum groundstate, which allows us to perform the transduction process with minimal added thermal noise, while maintaining an optomechanical cooperativity >1, so that microwave photons mapped into the mechanical resonator are effectively upconverted to the optical domain. We further verify the preservation of the coherence of the microwave signal throughout the transduction process.

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  • This paper contributes to the Superconducting Qubits research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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  • Conversion between signals in the microwave and optical domains is of great interest both for classical telecommunication, as well as for connecting future superconducting...

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