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Dive into the research topics where Devin Underwood is active.

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Featured researches published by Devin Underwood.


Physical Review A | 2012

Low-disorder microwave cavity lattices for quantum simulation with photons

Devin Underwood; Will Shanks; Jens Koch; Andrew Houck

We assess experimentally the suitability of coupled transmission line resonators for studies of quantum phase transitions of light. We have measured devices with low photon hopping rates t/2pi = 0.8MHz to quantify disorder in individual cavity frequencies. The observed disorder is consistent with small imperfections in fabrication. We studied the dependence of the disorder on transmission line geometry and used our results to fabricate devices with disorder less than two parts in 10^4. The normal mode spectrum of devices with a high photon hopping rate t/2pi = 31MHz shows little effect of disorder, rendering resonator arrays a good backbone for the study of condensed matter physics with photons.


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

Beyond strong coupling in a massively multimode cavity

Neereja Sundaresan; Yanbing Liu; Darius Sadri; Laszlo J. Szocs; Devin Underwood; Moein Malekakhlagh; Hakan E. Türeci; Andrew Houck

The study of light-matter interaction has seen a resurgence in recent years, stimulated by highly controllable, precise, and modular experiments in cavity quantum electrodynamics (QED). The achievement of strong coupling, where the coupling between a single atom and fundamental cavity mode exceeds the decay rates, was a major milestone that opened the doors to a multitude of new investigations. Here we introduce multimode strong coupling (MMSC), where the coupling is comparable to the free spectral range (FSR) of the cavity, i.e. the rate at which a qubit can absorb a photon from the cavity is comparable to the round trip transit rate of a photon in the cavity. We realize, via the circuit QED architecture, the first experiment accessing the MMSC regime, and report remarkably widespread and structured resonance fluorescence, whose origin extends beyond cavity enhancement of sidebands. Our results capture complex multimode, multiphoton processes, and the emergence of ultranarrow linewidths. Beyond the novel phenomena presented here, MMSC opens a major new direction in the exploration of light-matter interactions.


Nature Communications | 2013

A scanning transmon qubit for strong coupling circuit quantum electrodynamics

William Shanks; Devin Underwood; Andrew Houck

Like a quantum computer designed for a particular class of problems, a quantum simulator enables quantitative modelling of quantum systems that is computationally intractable with a classical computer. Superconducting circuits have recently been investigated as an alternative system in which microwave photons confined to a lattice of coupled resonators act as the particles under study, with qubits coupled to the resonators producing effective photon-photon interactions. Such a system promises insight into the non-equilibrium physics of interacting bosons, but new tools are needed to understand this complex behaviour. Here we demonstrate the operation of a scanning transmon qubit and propose its use as a local probe of photon number within a superconducting resonator lattice. We map the coupling strength of the qubit to a resonator on a separate chip and show that the system reaches the strong coupling regime over a wide scanning area.


Physical Review X | 2016

Imaging Photon Lattice States by Scanning Defect Microscopy

Devin Underwood; William Shanks; Andy C. Y. Li; Lamia Ateshian; Jens Koch; Andrew Houck

Microwave photons inside lattices of coupled resonators and superconducting qubits can exhibit surprising matter-like behavior. Realizing such open-system quantum simulators presents an experimental challenge and requires new tools and measurement techniques. Here, we introduce Scanning Defect Microscopy as one such tool and illustrate its use in mapping the normal-mode structure of microwave photons inside a 49-site Kagome lattice of coplanar waveguide resonators. Scanning is accomplished by moving a probe equipped with a sapphire tip across the lattice. This locally perturbs resonator frequencies and induces shifts of the lattice resonance frequencies which we determine by measuring the transmission spectrum. From the magnitude of mode shifts we can reconstruct photon field amplitudes at each lattice site and thus create spatial images of the photon-lattice normal modes.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2012

Minimizing random disorder in a kagome lattice of superconducting resonators

Devin Underwood; Will Shanks; Jens Koch; Andrew Houck

To ultimately study phase transitions of light, arrays of superconducting resonators must be made with low disorder in individual resonator frequencies. We fabricate and measure such arrays, minimizing disorder to a few parts in 104.


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Coherent Oscillations in Silicon Double Quantum Dots due to Meissner-screened Magnetic Field Gradients

Devin Underwood


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016

Multimode Strong Coupling in Circuit QED

Neereja Sundaresan; Yanbing Liu; Darius Sadri; Laszlo Szocs; Devin Underwood; Moein Malekakhlagh; Hakan E. Türeci; Andrew Houck


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

Perturbative scanning probe microscopy on a Kagome lattice of superconducting microwave resonators

Devin Underwood; Will Shanks; Andy C. Y. Li; Jens Koch; Andrew Houck


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

Experimental Study of a Disordered Jaynes-Cummings Lattice

Mattias Fitzpatrick; Devin Underwood; Darius Sadri; Jens Koch; Andrew Houck


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014

Non-Equilibrium Quantum Phases In The Jaynes-Cummings Lattice

Marius Constantin; Devin Underwood; Andrew Houck

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Jens Koch

Northwestern University

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Srikanth Srinivasan

Indian Institute of Technology Bombay

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