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Friday, January 12, 2018
12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
East Bridge 201 (Richard P. Feynman Lecture Hall)

IQIM/Applied Physics Seminar

From Many Modes to Many Bodies
David Schuster, Assistant Professor, Physics, University of Chicago,

Abstract: Superconducting circuits have emerged as a competitive platform for realizing a practical quantum computer, satisfying the challenges of controllability, long coherence and strong interactions between individual systems that are at the heart of coherent quantum computation. In this talk, I will explain how we can realize a fully connected quantum architecture using a parametric interactions between superconducting qubits and multi-mode resonators.  In addition, I will show how this well-developed toolbox can be applied to a different problem: the exploration of strongly correlated phases of photonic quantum matter. The qubits of the quantum circuit become the sites of a Bose Hubbard lattice - their anharmonicity provides the on-site photon-photon interaction, couplings between them generates inter-site tunneling, while multiplexed qubit readout provides time- and site- resolved microscopy of the Bose Hubbard system. We further develop a new method for dissipative preparation and stabilization of incompressible phases of matter, achieved through reservoir engineering. We characterize our Bose-Hubbard system through coherent lattice dynamics including quantum random walks, and then connect it to the dissipative stabilizer to realize and investigate a Mott insulator of photons. These experiments demonstrate the power of superconducting circuits for studying strongly correlated physics, and with the recently demonstrated low-loss microwave Chern insulators could point the way to topological many-body states of photons.

For more information, please contact Jennifer Blankenship by phone at 626-395-8124 or by email at [email protected].