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Dive into the research topics where Joonas Govenius is active.

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Featured researches published by Joonas Govenius.


Nature Communications | 2017

Quantum-circuit Refrigerator

Kuan Yen Tan; Matti Partanen; Russell Lake; Joonas Govenius; Shumpei Masuda; Mikko Möttönen

Quantum technology promises revolutionizing applications in information processing, communications, sensing and modelling. However, efficient on-demand cooling of the functional quantum degrees of freedom remains challenging in many solid-state implementations, such as superconducting circuits. Here we demonstrate direct cooling of a superconducting resonator mode using voltage-controllable electron tunnelling in a nanoscale refrigerator. This result is revealed by a decreased electron temperature at a resonator-coupled probe resistor, even for an elevated electron temperature at the refrigerator. Our conclusions are verified by control experiments and by a good quantitative agreement between theory and experimental observations at various operation voltages and bath temperatures. In the future, we aim to remove spurious dissipation introduced by our refrigerator and to decrease the operational temperature. Such an ideal quantum-circuit refrigerator has potential applications in the initialization of quantum electric devices. In the superconducting quantum computer, for example, fast and accurate reset of the quantum memory is needed.


Nature Physics | 2016

Quantum-limited heat conduction over macroscopic distances

Matti Partanen; Kuan Yen Tan; Joonas Govenius; Russell Lake; Miika Makela; Tuomo Tanttu; Mikko Möttönen

The emerging quantum technological apparatuses1, 2, such as the quantum computer3–6, call for extreme performance in thermal engineering7. Cold distant heat sinks are needed for the quantized electric degrees of freedom due to the increasing packaging density and heat dissipation. Importantly, quantum mechanics sets a fundamental upper limit for the flow of information and heat, which is quantified by the quantum of thermal conductance8–10. However, the short distance between the heat-exchanging bodies in the previous experiments11–14 hinders their applicability in quantum technology. Here, we present experimental observations of quantum-limited heat conduction over macroscopic distances extending to a metre. We achieved this improvement of four orders of magnitude in the distance by utilizing microwave photons travelling in superconducting transmission lines. Thus, it seems that quantum-limited heat conduction has no fundamental distance cutoff. This work establishes the integration of normal-metal components into the framework of circuit quantum electrodynamics15–17 which provides a basis for the superconducting quantum computer18–21. Especially, our results facilitate remote cooling of nanoelectronic devices using far-away in-situ-tunable heat sinks22, 23. Furthermore, quantum-limited heat conduction is important in contemporary thermodynamics24, 25. Here, the long distance may lead to ultimately efficient mesoscopic heat engines with promising practical applications26.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Flux-tunable phase shifter for microwaves

Roope Kokkoniemi; Tuomas Ollikainen; Russell Lake; sakari saarenpää; Kuan Yen Tan; Janne Kokkala; Ceren Dag; Joonas Govenius; Mikko Möttönen

We introduce a magnetic-flux-tunable phase shifter for propagating microwave photons, based on three equidistant superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs) on a transmission line. We experimentally implement the phase shifter and demonstrate that it produces a broad range of phase shifts and full transmission within the experimental uncertainty. Together with previously demonstrated beam splitters, this phase shifter can be utilized to implement arbitrary single-qubit gates for qubits based on propagating microwave photons. These results complement previous demonstrations of on-demand single-photon sources and detectors, and hence assist in the pursuit of an all-microwave quantum computer based on propagating photons.


Physical Review B | 2014

Microwave nanobolometer based on proximity Josephson junctions

Joonas Govenius; Russell Lake; Kuan Tan; Ville Pietila; Juhani Julin; I. J. Maasilta; Pauli Virtanen; Mikko Möttönen

We introduce a microwave bolometer aimed at high-quantum-efficiency detection of wave packet energy within the framework of circuit quantum electrodynamics, the ultimate goal being single microwave photon detection. We measure the differential thermal conductance between the detector and its heat bath, obtaining values as low as 5 fW/K at 50 mK. This is one tenth of the thermal conductance quantum and corresponds to a theoretical lower bound on noise-equivalent-power of order


Scientific Reports | 2018

Flux-tunable heat sink for quantum electric circuits

Matti Partanen; Kuan Yen Tan; Shumpei Masuda; Joonas Govenius; Russell Lake; Máté Jenei; Leif Grönberg; Juha Hassel; Slawomir Simbierowicz; Visa Vesterinen; Jani Tuorila; Tapio Ala-Nissila; Mikko Möttönen

10^{-20}


Advanced electronic materials | 2017

Microwave Admittance of Gold-Palladium Nanowires with Proximity-Induced Superconductivity

Russell Lake; Joonas Govenius; Roope Kokkoniemi; Kuan Yen Tan; Matti Partanen; Pauli Virtanen; Mikko Möttönen


Physical Review A | 2015

Parity measurement of remote qubits using dispersive coupling and photodetection

Joonas Govenius; Yuichiro Matsuzaki; Ivan Savenko; Mikko Möttönen

W/\sqrt{\mbox{Hz}}


Scientific Reports | 2018

Observation of microwave absorption and emission from incoherent electron tunneling through a normal-metal–insulator–superconductor junction

Shumpei Masuda; Kuan Yen Tan; Matti Partanen; Russell Lake; Joonas Govenius; Matti Silveri; Hermann Grabert; Mikko Möttönen

at 50 mK. By measuring the differential thermal conductance of the same bolometer design in qualitatively different environments and materials, we determine that electron--photon coupling dominates the thermalization of our nanobolometer.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Detection of Zeptojoule Microwave Pulses Using Electrothermal Feedback in Proximity-Induced Josephson Junctions

Joonas Govenius; Russell Lake; Kuan Tan; Mikko Möttönen

Superconducting microwave circuits show great potential for practical quantum technological applications such as quantum information processing. However, fast and on-demand initialization of the quantum degrees of freedom in these devices remains a challenge. Here, we experimentally implement a tunable heat sink that is potentially suitable for the initialization of superconducting qubits. Our device consists of two coupled resonators. The first resonator has a high quality factor and a fixed frequency whereas the second resonator is designed to have a low quality factor and a tunable resonance frequency. We engineer the low quality factor using an on-chip resistor and the frequency tunability using a superconducting quantum interference device. When the two resonators are in resonance, the photons in the high-quality resonator can be efficiently dissipated. We show that the corresponding loaded quality factor can be tuned from above 105 down to a few thousand at 10 GHz in good quantitative agreement with our theoretical model.


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016

Observation of quantum-limited heat conduction over macroscopic distances

Mikko Möttönen; Matti Partanen; Kuan Yen Tan; Joonas Govenius; Russell Lake; Miika Makela; Tuomo Tanttu

We report quantitative electrical admittance measurements of diffusive superconductor--normal-metal--superconductor (SNS) junctions at gigahertz frequencies and millikelvin temperatures. The gold-palladium-based SNS junctions are arranged into a chain of superconducting quantum interference devices. The chain is coupled strongly to a multimode microwave resonator with a mode spacing of approximately 0.6 GHz. By measuring the resonance frequencies and quality factors of the resonator modes, we extract the dissipative and reactive parts of the admittance of the chain. We compare the phase and temperature dependence of the admittance near 1 GHz to theory based on the time-dependent Usadel equations. This comparison allows us to identify important discrepancies between theory and experiment that are not resolved by including inelastic scattering or elastic spin-flip scattering in the theory.

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Kuan Tan

University of New South Wales

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Shumpei Masuda

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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