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

IQIM Postdoctoral and Graduate Student Seminar

From many modes to many bodies
David Schuster, Physics Department and James Franck Institute, 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 Marcia Brown by phone at 626-395-4013 or by email at [email protected].