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Dive into the research topics where Kosuke Kakuyanagi is active.

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Featured researches published by Kosuke Kakuyanagi.


Nature | 2011

Coherent coupling of a superconducting flux qubit to an electron spin ensemble in diamond

Xiaobo Zhu; Shiro Saito; Alexander Kemp; Kosuke Kakuyanagi; Shin-ichi Karimoto; Hayato Nakano; William J. Munro; Yasuhiro Tokura; Mark S. Everitt; Kae Nemoto; Makoto Kasu; Norikazu Mizuochi; Kouichi Semba

During the past decade, research into superconducting quantum bits (qubits) based on Josephson junctions has made rapid progress. Many foundational experiments have been performed, and superconducting qubits are now considered one of the most promising systems for quantum information processing. However, the experimentally reported coherence times are likely to be insufficient for future large-scale quantum computation. A natural solution to this problem is a dedicated engineered quantum memory based on atomic and molecular systems. The question of whether coherent quantum coupling is possible between such natural systems and a single macroscopic artificial atom has attracted considerable attention since the first demonstration of macroscopic quantum coherence in Josephson junction circuits. Here we report evidence of coherent strong coupling between a single macroscopic superconducting artificial atom (a flux qubit) and an ensemble of electron spins in the form of nitrogen–vacancy colour centres in diamond. Furthermore, we have observed coherent exchange of a single quantum of energy between a flux qubit and a macroscopic ensemble consisting of about 3 × 107 such colour centres. This provides a foundation for future quantum memories and hybrid devices coupling microwave and optical systems.


Nature Physics | 2016

Superconducting qubit–oscillator circuit beyond the ultrastrong-coupling regime

Fumiki Yoshihara; Tomoko Fuse; Sahel Ashhab; Kosuke Kakuyanagi; Shiro Saito; Kouichi Semba

A circuit that pairs a flux qubit with an LC oscillator via Josephson junctions pushes the coupling between light to matter to uncharted territory, with the potential for new applications in quantum technologies. The interaction between an atom and the electromagnetic field inside a cavity1,2,3,4,5,6 has played a crucial role in developing our understanding of light–matter interaction, and is central to various quantum technologies, including lasers and many quantum computing architectures. Superconducting qubits7,8 have allowed the realization of strong9,10 and ultrastrong11,12,13 coupling between artificial atoms and cavities. If the coupling strength g becomes as large as the atomic and cavity frequencies (Δ and ωo, respectively), the energy eigenstates including the ground state are predicted to be highly entangled14. There has been an ongoing debate15,16,17 over whether it is fundamentally possible to realize this regime in realistic physical systems. By inductively coupling a flux qubit and an LC oscillator via Josephson junctions, we have realized circuits with g/ωo ranging from 0.72 to 1.34 and g/Δ ≫ 1. Using spectroscopy measurements, we have observed unconventional transition spectra that are characteristic of this new regime. Our results provide a basis for ground-state-based entangled pair generation and open a new direction of research on strongly correlated light–matter states in circuit quantum electrodynamics.


Physical Review Letters | 2005

Texture in the Superconducting Order Parameter of CeCoIn~5 Revealed by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

Kosuke Kakuyanagi; M. Saitoh; K. Kumagai; S. Takashima; M. Nohara; H. Takagi; Y. Matsuda

We present a 115In NMR study of the quasi-two-dimensional heavy-fermion superconductor CeCoIn5 believed to host a Fulde-Ferrel-Larkin-Ovchinnikov (FFLO) state. In the vicinity of the upper critical field and with a magnetic field applied parallel to the ab plane, the NMR spectrum exhibits a dramatic change below T*(H) which well coincides with the position of reported anomalies in specific heat and ultrasound velocity. We argue that our results provide the first microscopic evidence for the occurrence of a spatially modulated superconducting order parameter expected in a FFLO state. The NMR spectrum also implies an anomalous electronic structure of vortex cores.


Physical Review B | 2002

Quasiparticle excitation in and around the vortex core of underdoped YBa 2 Cu 4 O 8 studied by site-selective NMR

Kosuke Kakuyanagi; K. Kumagai; Y. Matsuda

We report a site-selective


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Towards realizing a quantum memory for a superconducting qubit: storage and retrieval of quantum states.

Shiro Saito; Xiaobo Zhu; Robert Amsuss; Yuichiro Matsuzaki; Kosuke Kakuyanagi; Takaaki Shimo-Oka; Norikazu Mizuochi; Kae Nemoto; William J. Munro; Kouichi Semba

{}^{17}\mathrm{O}


Physical Review Letters | 2003

Antiferromagnetic vortex core in Tl(2)Ba(2)CuO(6+delta) studied by nuclear magnetic resonance.

Kosuke Kakuyanagi; K. Kumagai; Y. Matsuda; Masashi Hasegawa

spin-lattice relaxation rate


Nature Communications | 2014

Observation of dark states in a superconductor diamond quantum hybrid system.

Xiaobo Zhu; Yuichiro Matsuzaki; Robert Amsuss; Kosuke Kakuyanagi; Takaaki Shimo-Oka; Norikazu Mizuochi; Kae Nemoto; Kouichi Semba; William J. Munro; Shiro Saito

{T}_{1}^{\ensuremath{-}1}


Physical Review A | 2017

Characteristic spectra of circuit quantum electrodynamics systems from the ultrastrong- to the deep-strong-coupling regime

Fumiki Yoshihara; Tomoko Fuse; Sahel Ashhab; Kosuke Kakuyanagi; Shiro Saito; Kouichi Semba

in the vortex state of underdoped


Physical Review B | 2010

Quantum Zeno effect with a superconducting qubit

Yuichiro Matsuzaki; Shiro Saito; Kosuke Kakuyanagi; Kouichi Semba

{\mathrm{YBa}}_{2}{\mathrm{Cu}}_{4}{\mathrm{O}}_{8}.


New Journal of Physics | 2015

Observation of quantum Zeno effect in a superconducting flux qubit

Kosuke Kakuyanagi; T Baba; Yuichiro Matsuzaki; Hayato Nakano; Shiro Saito; Kouichi Semba

We found that

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Shiro Saito

University of Tokushima

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Kouichi Semba

National Institute of Informatics

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William J. Munro

National Institute of Informatics

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Xiaobo Zhu

University of Science and Technology of China

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