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Dive into the research topics where Matthew LaHaye is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew LaHaye.


Nanotechnology | 2016

Measurements of nanoresonator-qubit interactions in a hybrid quantum electromechanical system

Francisco Rouxinol; Yu Hao; Frederico Brito; A. O. Caldeira; Elinor K. Irish; Matthew LaHaye

Experiments to probe the basic quantum properties of motional degrees of freedom of mechanical systems have developed rapidly over the last decade. One promising approach is to use hybrid electromechanical systems incorporating superconducting qubits and microwave circuitry. However, a critical challenge facing the development of these systems is to achieve strong coupling between mechanics and qubits while simultaneously reducing coupling of both the qubit and mechanical mode to the environment. Here we report measurements of a qubit-coupled mechanical resonator system consisting of an ultra-high-frequency nanoresonator and a long coherence-time superconducting transmon qubit, embedded in a superconducting coplanar waveguide cavity. It is demonstrated that the nanoresonator and transmon have commensurate energies and transmon coherence times are one order of magnitude larger than for all previously reported qubit-coupled nanoresonators. Moreover, we show that numerical simulations of this new hybrid quantum system are in good agreement with spectroscopic measurements and suggest that the nanoresonator in our device resides at low thermal occupation number, near its ground state, acting as a dissipative bath seen by the qubit. We also outline how this system could soon be developed as a platform for implementing more advanced experiments with direct relevance to quantum information processing and quantum thermodynamics, including the study of nanoresonator quantum noise properties, reservoir engineering, and nanomechanical quantum state generation and detection.


New Journal of Physics | 2015

Testing time reversal symmetry in artificial atoms

Frederico Brito; Francisco Rouxinol; Matthew LaHaye; A. O. Caldeira

Over the past several decades, a rich series of experiments has repeatedly verified the quantum nature of superconducting devices, leading some of these systems to be regarded as artificial atoms. In addition to their application in quantum information processing, these ‘atoms’ provide a test bed for studying quantum mechanics in macroscopic limits. Regarding the last point, we present here a feasible protocol for directly testing time reversal symmetry (TRS) through the verification of the microreversibility principle in a superconducting artificial atom. TRS is a fundamental property of quantum mechanics and is expected to hold if the dynamics of the artificial atom strictly follow the Schrodinger equation. However, this property has yet to be tested in any macroscopic quantum system. In the end, as an application of this work, we outline how the successful implementation of the protocol would provide the first verification of the quantum work fluctuation theorems with superconducting systems.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2015

Superconducting metamaterials and qubits

B.L.T. Plourde; Haozhi Wang; Francisco Rouxinol; Matthew LaHaye

Superconducting thin-film metamaterial resonators can provide a dense microwave mode spectrum with potential applications in quantum information science. We report on the fabrication and low-temperature measurement of metamaterial transmission-line resonators patterned from Al thin films. We also describe multiple approaches for numerical simulations of the microwave properties of these structures, along with comparisons with the measured transmission spectra. The ability to predict the mode spectrum based on the chip layout provides a path towards future designs integrating metamaterial resonators with superconducting qubits.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2015

Superconducting circuitry for quantum electromechanical systems

Matthew LaHaye; Francisco Rouxinol; Yu Hao; Seung Bo Shim; Elinor K. Irish

Superconducting systems have a long history of use in experiments that push the frontiers of mechanical sensing. This includes both applied and fundamental research, which at present day ranges from quantum computing research and e orts to explore Planck-scale physics to fundamental studies on the nature of motion and the quantum limits on our ability to measure it. In this paper, we first provide a short history of the role of superconducting circuitry and devices in mechanical sensing, focusing primarily on efforts in the last decade to push the study of quantum mechanics to include motion on the scale of human-made structures. This background sets the stage for the remainder of the paper, which focuses on the development of quantum electromechanical systems (QEMS) that incorporate superconducting quantum bits (qubits), superconducting transmission line resonators and flexural nanomechanical elements. In addition to providing the motivation and relevant background on the physical behavior of these systems, we discuss our recent efforts to develop a particular type of QEMS that is based upon the Cooper-pair box (CPB) and superconducting coplanar waveguide (CPW) cavities, a system which has the potential to serve as a testbed for studying the quantum properties of motion in engineered systems.


EPJ Quantum Technology | 2016

Quantum simulation of the Anderson Hamiltonian with an array of coupled nanoresonators: delocalization and thermalization effects

John Lozada-Vera; Alejandro Carrillo; Olimpio Pereira de Sá Neto; Jalil Khatibi Moqadam; Matthew LaHaye; Marcos C. de Oliveira

The possibility of using nanoelectromechanical systems as a simulation tool for quantum many-body effects is explored. It is demonstrated that an array of electrostatically coupled nanoresonators can effectively simulate the Bose-Hubbard model without interactions, corresponding in the single-phonon regime to the Anderson tight-binding model. Employing a density matrix formalism for the system coupled to a bosonic thermal bath, we study the interplay between disorder and thermalization, focusing on the delocalization process. It is found that the phonon population remains localized for a long time at low enough temperatures; with increasing temperatures the localization is rapidly lost due to thermal pumping of excitations into the array, producing in the equilibrium a fully thermalized system. Finally, we consider a possible experimental design to measure the phonon population in the array by means of a superconducting transmon qubit coupled to individual nanoresonators. We also consider the possibility of using the proposed quantum simulator for realizing continuous-time quantum walks.


Physical Review B | 2018

Electromechanical quantum simulators

F. Tacchino; Alessandro Chiesa; Matthew LaHaye; S. Carretta; Dario Gerace


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

Investigations and Potential Applications of Qubit-Nanoresonator-Cavity Interactions in a Superconducting Quantum Electromechanical System

Matthew LaHaye


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

Multi-mode Circuit Quantum Electrodynamics with Superconducting Metamaterial Resonators

Sagar Indrajeet; Haozhi Wang; Matthew Hutchings; Matthew LaHaye; B.L.T. Plourde; Bruno G. Taketani; Frank K. Wilhelm


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Develop of a quantum electromechanical hybrid system

Yu Hao; Francisco Rouxinol; Frederico Brito; A. O. Caldeira; Elinor K. Irish; Matthew LaHaye


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Superconducting metamaterial resonators: analysis of mode structure

Haozhi Wang; Matthew Hutchings; Sagar Indrajeet; Francisco Rouxinol; Matthew LaHaye; B.L.T. Plourde; Bruno G. Taketani; Frank K. Wilhelm; Alexander P. Zhuravel; Alexey V. Ustinov

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Francisco Rouxinol

State University of Campinas

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A. O. Caldeira

State University of Campinas

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Keith Schwab

California Institute of Technology

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Yu Hao

Syracuse University

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Elinor K. Irish

University of Southampton

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