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Quantum squeezing in a nonlinear mechanical oscillator

Physics

Quantum squeezing in a nonlinear mechanical oscillator

S. Marti, U. V. Lüpke, et al.

Experience the groundbreaking research conducted by Stefano Marti and colleagues at ETH Zürich as they explore the fascinating world of mechanical resonators and superconducting qubits. This study reveals how non-Gaussian quantum states are prepared, showcasing applications in quantum metrology and sensing through innovative two-phonon driving techniques.... show more
Abstract
Mechanical degrees of freedom are natural candidates for continuous-variable quantum information processing and bosonic quantum simulations. However, these applications require the engineering of squeezing and nonlinearities in the quantum regime. Here we demonstrate squeezing below the zero-point fluctuations of a gigahertz-frequency mechanical resonator coupled to a superconducting qubit. This is achieved by parametrically driving the qubit, which results in an effective two-phonon drive. In addition, we show that the resonator mode inherits a nonlinearity from the off-resonant coupling with the qubit, which can be tuned by controlling the detuning. We, thus, realize a mechanical squeezed Kerr oscillator, in which we demonstrate the preparation of non-Gaussian quantum states of motion with Wigner function negativities and high quantum Fisher information. This shows that our results can also have applications in quantum metrology and sensing.
Publisher
Nature Physics
Published On
Sep 01, 2024
Authors
Stefano Marti, Uwe von Lüpke, Om Joshi, Yu Yang, Marius Bild, Andraz Omahen, Yiwen Chu, Matteo Fadel
Tags
quantum states
mechanical resonator
superconducting qubit
squeezed Kerr oscillator
quantum metrology
non-Gaussian states
parametric driving
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