A squeezed mechanical oscillator with milli-second quantum decoherence
An enduring challenge in constructing mechanical oscillator-based hybrid quantum systems is to ensure engineered coupling to an auxiliary degree of freedom while maintaining good mechanical isolation from the environment, that is, low quantum decoherence, consisting of thermal decoherence and dephas...
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creator | Youssefi, Amir Kono, Shingo Chegnizadeh, Mahdi Kippenberg, Tobias J |
description | An enduring challenge in constructing mechanical oscillator-based hybrid quantum systems is to ensure engineered coupling to an auxiliary degree of freedom while maintaining good mechanical isolation from the environment, that is, low quantum decoherence, consisting of thermal decoherence and dephasing. Here, we overcome this challenge by introducing a superconducting circuit optomechanical platform which exhibits a low quantum decoherence while having a large optomechanical coupling, which allows us to prepare the quantum ground and squeezed states of motion with high fidelity. We directly measure a thermal decoherence rate of 20.5 Hz (corresponding to T_1 = 7.7 ms) as well as a pure dephasing rate of 0.09 Hz, resulted in a 100-fold improvement of quantum-state lifetime compared to the prior optomechanical systems. This enables us to reach to 0.07 quanta motional ground state occupation (93% fidelity) and realize mechanical squeezing of -2.7 dB below zero-point-fluctuation. Furthermore, we observe the free evolution of mechanical squeezed state, preserving its non-classical nature over milli-second timescales. Such ultra-low quantum decoherence not only increases the fidelity of quantum control and measurement of macroscopic mechanical systems, but may also benefit interfacing with qubits, and places the system in a parameter regime suitable for tests of quantum gravity. (Keywords: Quantum optomechanics, Superconducting circuit electromechanics, Quantum squeezing, Quantum memory, Quantum coherence) |
doi_str_mv | 10.48550/arxiv.2208.13082 |
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Here, we overcome this challenge by introducing a superconducting circuit optomechanical platform which exhibits a low quantum decoherence while having a large optomechanical coupling, which allows us to prepare the quantum ground and squeezed states of motion with high fidelity. We directly measure a thermal decoherence rate of 20.5 Hz (corresponding to T_1 = 7.7 ms) as well as a pure dephasing rate of 0.09 Hz, resulted in a 100-fold improvement of quantum-state lifetime compared to the prior optomechanical systems. This enables us to reach to 0.07 quanta motional ground state occupation (93% fidelity) and realize mechanical squeezing of -2.7 dB below zero-point-fluctuation. Furthermore, we observe the free evolution of mechanical squeezed state, preserving its non-classical nature over milli-second timescales. Such ultra-low quantum decoherence not only increases the fidelity of quantum control and measurement of macroscopic mechanical systems, but may also benefit interfacing with qubits, and places the system in a parameter regime suitable for tests of quantum gravity. (Keywords: Quantum optomechanics, Superconducting circuit electromechanics, Quantum squeezing, Quantum memory, Quantum coherence)</description><identifier>EISSN: 2331-8422</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2208.13082</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Ithaca: Cornell University Library, arXiv.org</publisher><subject>Dark matter ; Heating rate ; Hybrid systems ; Mechanical oscillators ; Mechanical systems ; Microwave circuits ; Physics - Applied Physics ; Physics - Optics ; Physics - Quantum Physics ; Quantum computing ; Quantum mechanics</subject><ispartof>arXiv.org, 2023-04</ispartof><rights>2023. This work is published under http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/ (the “License”). 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Here, we overcome this challenge by introducing a superconducting circuit optomechanical platform which exhibits a low quantum decoherence while having a large optomechanical coupling, which allows us to prepare the quantum ground and squeezed states of motion with high fidelity. We directly measure a thermal decoherence rate of 20.5 Hz (corresponding to T_1 = 7.7 ms) as well as a pure dephasing rate of 0.09 Hz, resulted in a 100-fold improvement of quantum-state lifetime compared to the prior optomechanical systems. This enables us to reach to 0.07 quanta motional ground state occupation (93% fidelity) and realize mechanical squeezing of -2.7 dB below zero-point-fluctuation. Furthermore, we observe the free evolution of mechanical squeezed state, preserving its non-classical nature over milli-second timescales. Such ultra-low quantum decoherence not only increases the fidelity of quantum control and measurement of macroscopic mechanical systems, but may also benefit interfacing with qubits, and places the system in a parameter regime suitable for tests of quantum gravity. 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Here, we overcome this challenge by introducing a superconducting circuit optomechanical platform which exhibits a low quantum decoherence while having a large optomechanical coupling, which allows us to prepare the quantum ground and squeezed states of motion with high fidelity. We directly measure a thermal decoherence rate of 20.5 Hz (corresponding to T_1 = 7.7 ms) as well as a pure dephasing rate of 0.09 Hz, resulted in a 100-fold improvement of quantum-state lifetime compared to the prior optomechanical systems. This enables us to reach to 0.07 quanta motional ground state occupation (93% fidelity) and realize mechanical squeezing of -2.7 dB below zero-point-fluctuation. Furthermore, we observe the free evolution of mechanical squeezed state, preserving its non-classical nature over milli-second timescales. Such ultra-low quantum decoherence not only increases the fidelity of quantum control and measurement of macroscopic mechanical systems, but may also benefit interfacing with qubits, and places the system in a parameter regime suitable for tests of quantum gravity. (Keywords: Quantum optomechanics, Superconducting circuit electromechanics, Quantum squeezing, Quantum memory, Quantum coherence)</abstract><cop>Ithaca</cop><pub>Cornell University Library, arXiv.org</pub><doi>10.48550/arxiv.2208.13082</doi><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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subjects | Dark matter Heating rate Hybrid systems Mechanical oscillators Mechanical systems Microwave circuits Physics - Applied Physics Physics - Optics Physics - Quantum Physics Quantum computing Quantum mechanics |
title | A squeezed mechanical oscillator with milli-second quantum decoherence |
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