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Converting microwave and telecom photons with a silicon photonic nanomechanical interface

Engineering and Technology

Converting microwave and telecom photons with a silicon photonic nanomechanical interface

G. Arnold, M. Wulf, et al.

Discover groundbreaking research by G. Arnold, M. Wulf, S. Barzanjeh, E. S. Redchenko, A. Rueda, W. J. Hease, F. Hassani, and J. M. Fink that showcases a fully integrated silicon photonic nanomechanical interface achieving impressive bidirectional transduction efficiency at millikelvin temperatures. This compact and CMOS-compatible device is set to revolutionize integration with superconducting qubits.... show more
Abstract
Practical quantum networks require low-loss and noise-resilient optical interconnects as well as non-Gaussian resources for entanglement distillation and distributed quantum computation. The latter could be provided by superconducting circuits but existing solutions to interface the microwave and optical domains lack either scalability or efficiency, and in most cases the conversion noise is not known. In this work we utilize the unique opportunities of silicon photonics, cavity optomechanics and superconducting circuits to demonstrate a fully integrated, coherent transducer interfacing the microwave X and the telecom S bands with a total (internal) bidirectional transduction efficiency of 1.2% (135%) at millikelvin temperatures. The coupling relies solely on the radiation pressure interaction mediated by the femtometer-scale motion of two silicon nanobeams reaching a Va as low as 16 µV for sub-nanowatt pump powers. Without the associated optomechanical gain, we achieve a total (internal) pure conversion efficiency of up to 0.019% (1.6%), relevant for future noise-free operation on this qubit-compatible platform.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Sep 08, 2020
Authors
G. Arnold, M. Wulf, S. Barzanjeh, E. S. Redchenko, A. Rueda, W. J. Hease, F. Hassani, J. M. Fink
Tags
transducer
microwave bands
telecom bands
silicon photonic
bidirectional transduction
superconducting qubits
CMOS-compatible
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