Alexey Feofanov
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
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Featured researches published by Alexey Feofanov.
international conference on optical mems and nanophotonics | 2018
Nathan Bernier; Laszlo Daniel Toth; A. Koottandavida; Marie Ioannou; Daniel Malz; Andreas Nunnenkamp; Alexey Feofanov; Tobias J. Kippenberg
Nonreciprocal microwave devices are ubiquitous in radar and radio communication and indispensable in the readout chains of superconducting quantum circuits. Since they commonly rely on ferrite materials requiring large magnetic fields that make them bulky and lossy, there has been significant interest in magnetic-field-free on-chip alternatives, such as those recently implemented using the Josephson nonlinearity. Here, we realize reconfigurable nonreciprocal transmission between two microwave modes using purely optomechanical interactions in a superconducting electromechanical circuit. The scheme relies on the interference in two mechanical modes that mediate coupling between the microwave cavities and requires no magnetic field. We analyse the isolation, transmission and the noise properties of this nonreciprocal circuit. Finally, we show how quantum-limited circulators can be realized with the same principle. All-optomechanically mediated nonreciprocity demonstrated here can also be extended to directional amplifiers, and it forms the basis towards realizing topological states of light and sound.Nonreciprocal optical devices traditionally rely on magnetic fields and magnetic-free approaches are rather recent. Here, Bernier et al. propose and demonstrate a purely optomechanical circulator with reconfigurable transmission without the need for direct coupling between input and output modes.
Nature Physics | 2017
Laszlo Daniel Toth; Nathan Bernier; Andreas Nunnenkamp; Alexey Feofanov; Tobias J. Kippenberg
This work was funded by the SNF, the NCCR Quantum Science and Technology (QSIT), and the European Union Seventh Framework Program through iQUOEMS (grant no. 323924). L.D.T. is supported by Marie Curie ITN cQOM (grant no. 290161). T.J.K. acknowledges financial support from an ERC AdG (QuREM). A.N. holds a University Research Fellowship from the Royal Society and acknowledges support from the Winton Programme for the Physics of Sustainability.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
Andreas Nunnenkamp; Vivishek Sudhir; Alexey Feofanov; A. Roulet; Tobias J. Kippenberg
Cavity optomechanical phenomena, such as cooling, amplification, or optomechanically induced transparency, emerge due to a strong imbalance in the dissipation rates of the parametrically coupled electromagnetic and mechanical resonators. Here we analyze the reversed dissipation regime where the mechanical energy relaxation rate exceeds the energy decay rate of the electromagnetic cavity. We demonstrate that this regime allows for mechanically induced amplification (or cooling) of the electromagnetic mode. Gain, bandwidth, and added noise of this electromagnetic amplifier are derived and compared to amplification in the normal dissipation regime. In addition, we analyze the parametric instability, i.e., optomechanical Brillouin lasing, and contrast it to conventional optomechanical phonon lasing. Finally, we propose an experimental scheme that realizes the reversed dissipation regime using parametric coupling and optomechanical cooling with a second electromagnetic mode enabling quantum-limited amplification. Recent advances in high-Q superconducting microwave resonators make the reversed dissipation regime experimentally realizable.
Physical Review Letters | 2018
Daniel Malz; Laszlo Daniel Toth; Nathan Bernier; Alexey Feofanov; Tobias J. Kippenberg; Andreas Nunnenkamp
Directional amplifiers are an important resource in quantum-information processing, as they protect sensitive quantum systems from excess noise. Here, we propose an implementation of phase-preserving and phase-sensitive directional amplifiers for microwave signals in an electromechanical setup comprising two microwave cavities and two mechanical resonators. We show that both can reach their respective quantum limits on added noise. In the reverse direction, they emit thermal noise stemming from the mechanical resonators; we discuss how this noise can be suppressed, a crucial aspect for technological applications. The isolation bandwidth in both is of the order of the mechanical linewidth divided by the amplitude gain. We derive the bandwidth and gain-bandwidth product for both and find that the phase-sensitive amplifier has an unlimited gain-bandwidth product. Our study represents an important step toward flexible, on-chip integrated nonreciprocal amplifiers of microwave signals.
Physical Review A | 2016
Clément Javerzac-Galy; Kirill Plekhanov; Nathan Bernier; Laszlo Daniel Toth; Alexey Feofanov; Tobias J. Kippenberg
We propose a device architecture capable of direct quantum electro-optical conversion of microwave to optical photons. The hybrid system consists of a planar superconducting microwave circuit coupled to an integrated whispering-gallery-mode microresonator made from an electro-optical material. We show that electro-optical (vacuum) coupling rates
Physics Letters A | 2017
Laszlo Daniel Toth; Nathan Bernier; Alexey Feofanov; Tobias J. Kippenberg
g_0
IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2016
Etienne Dumur; Bruno Küng; Alexey Feofanov; Thomas Weißl; Yuriy Krupko; Nicolas Roch; Cécile Naud; Wiebke Guichard; Olivier Buisson
as large as
Physical Review Letters | 2012
Florent Lecocq; Ioan M. Pop; Iulian Matei; Etienne Dumur; Alexey Feofanov; Cécile Naud; Wiebke Guichard; Olivier Buisson
\sim 2\pi \, \mathcal{O}(10-100)
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2016
Laszlo Daniel Toth; Nathan Bernier; Andreas Nunnenkamp; E. Glushkov; Alexey Feofanov; Tobias J. Kippenberg
kHz are achievable with currently available technology, due to the small mode volume of the planar microwave resonator. Operating at millikelvin temperatures, such a converter would enable high-efficiency conversion of microwave to optical photons. We analyze the added noise, and show that maximum conversion efficiency is achieved for a multi-photon cooperativity of unity which can be reached with optical power as low as
Physical Review A | 2018
Nathan Bernier; Laszlo Daniel Toth; Alexey Feofanov; Tobias J. Kippenberg
\mathcal{O}(1)\,\mathrm{mW}