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Artificial Atoms make Microwave Photons Countable

Posted February 01, 2007 5:37 PM

From EurekAlert! - Breaking News:

Using artificial atoms on a chip, Yale physicists have taken the next step toward quantum computing by demonstrating that the particle nature of microwave photons can now be detected, according to a report spotlighted in the Feb. 1 issue of the journal Nature. Quantum theories are often considered to apply best to processes that happen on the smallest scale of atoms and molecules. By making artificial atoms larger — to a size that is nearly visible — and using microwaves as the source of energy, the collaborative research from the laboratory of Professor Robert Schoelkopf and the theory group of Professor Steven Girvin in the departments of Applied Physics and Physics at Yale created an electronic circuit that stores and measures individual microwave photons. In the process, they bring quantum mechanics to a larger scale and hope to employ it to build new kinds of quantum machines.

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Join Date: Oct 2006
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Re: Artificial Atoms make Microwave Photons Countable

02/04/2007 11:28 AM

I remember reading a similarly cryptic an uninformative summary a while back (2004?). I've followed it up as far as I can, and I couldn't find any mention of the mechanism they use that distinguishes their quantised cavity from an ordinary unquantised resonator. I hope/suspect their "retaining time" is something different from Q - at a frequency of 5-GHz and using superconductors, a Q of 10 000 would not be out of the ordinary.

Can anyone shed any microwave on this?

Fyz

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