Collective bosonic effects in an array of transmon devices

Tuure Orell, Maximilian Zanner, Mathieu L. Juan, Aleksei Sharafiev, Romain Albert, Stefan Oleschko, Gerhard Kirchmair, and Matti Silveri
Phys. Rev. A 105, 063701 – Published 1 June 2022

Abstract

Multiple emitters coherently interacting with an electromagnetic mode give rise to collective effects such as correlated decay and coherent exchange interaction, depending on the separation of the emitters. By diagonalizing the effective non-Hermitian many-body Hamiltonian we reveal the complex-valued eigenvalue spectrum encoding the decay and interaction characteristics. We show that there are significant differences in the emerging collective effects for an array of interacting anharmonic oscillators compared to those of two-level systems and harmonic oscillators. The bosonic decay rate of the most superradiant state increases linearly as a function of the filling factor and exceeds that of two-level systems in magnitude. Furthermore, with bosonic systems, dark states are formed at each filling factor. These are in strong contrast with two-level systems, where the maximal superradiance is observed at half-filling and with larger filling factors superradiance diminishes and no dark states are formed. As an experimentally relevant setup of bosonic waveguide QED, we focus on arrays of transmon devices embedded inside a rectangular waveguide. Specifically, we study the setup of two transmon pairs realized experimentally in Zanner et al. [Nat. Phys. 18, 538 (2022)] and show that it is necessary to consider transmons as bosonic multilevel emitters to accurately recover correct collective effects for the higher excitation manifolds.

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  • Received 22 December 2021
  • Accepted 16 May 2022

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.105.063701

©2022 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Atomic, Molecular & OpticalQuantum Information, Science & Technology

Authors & Affiliations

Tuure Orell1, Maximilian Zanner2,3, Mathieu L. Juan4, Aleksei Sharafiev2,3, Romain Albert2,3, Stefan Oleschko2,3, Gerhard Kirchmair2,3, and Matti Silveri1

  • 1Nano and Molecular Systems Research Unit, University of Oulu, 90014 Oulu, Finland
  • 2Institute for Experimental Physics, University of Innsbruck, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria
  • 3Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Austrian Academy of Sciences, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria
  • 4Institut Quantique and Département de Physique, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke J1K2R1 Québec, Canada

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Vol. 105, Iss. 6 — June 2022

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