Pasi Lähteenmäki
Aalto University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Pasi Lähteenmäki.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Pasi Lähteenmäki; G. S. Paraoanu; Juha Hassel; Pertti J. Hakonen
The zero-point energy stored in the modes of an electromagnetic cavity has experimentally detectable effects, giving rise to an attractive interaction between the opposite walls, the static Casimir effect. A dynamical version of this effect was predicted to occur when the vacuum energy is changed either by moving the walls of the cavity or by changing the index of refraction, resulting in the conversion of vacuum fluctuations into real photons. Here, we demonstrate the dynamical Casimir effect using a Josephson metamaterial embedded in a microwave cavity at 5.4 GHz. We modulate the effective length of the cavity by flux-biasing the metamaterial based on superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs), which results in variation of a few percentage points in the speed of light. We extract the full 4 × 4 covariance matrix of the emitted microwave radiation, demonstrating that photons at frequencies symmetrical with respect to half of the modulation frequency are generated in pairs. At large detunings of the cavity from half of the modulation frequency, we find power spectra that clearly show the theoretically predicted hallmark of the Casimir effect: a bimodal, “sparrow-tail” structure. The observed substantial photon flux cannot be assigned to parametric amplification of thermal fluctuations; its creation is a direct consequence of the noncommutativity structure of quantum field theory.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
Zhenbing Tan; Daniel Cox; Teemu Nieminen; Pasi Lähteenmäki; Dmitry Golubev; G. B. Lesovik; Pertti J. Hakonen
A split Cooper pair is a natural source for entangled electrons which is a basic ingredient for quantum information in the solid state. We report an experiment on a superconductor-graphene double quantum dot (QD) system, in which we observe Cooper pair splitting (CPS) up to a CPS efficiency of ∼10%. With bias on both QDs, we are able to detect a positive conductance correlation across the two distinctly decoupled QDs. Furthermore, with bias only on one QD, CPS and elastic cotunneling can be distinguished by tuning the energy levels of the QDs to be asymmetric or symmetric with respect to the Fermi level in the superconductor.
Scientific Reports | 2012
Pasi Lähteenmäki; Visa Vesterinen; Juha Hassel; Heikki Seppä; Pertti J. Hakonen
The fundamental noise limit of a phase-preserving amplifier at frequency is the standard quantum limit . In the microwave range, the best candidates have been amplifiers based on superconducting quantum interference devices (reaching the noise temperature at 700 MHz), and non-degenerate parametric amplifiers (reaching noise levels close to the quantum limit at 8 GHz). We introduce a new type of an amplifier based on the negative resistance of a selectively damped Josephson junction. Noise performance of our amplifier is limited by mixing of quantum noise from Josephson oscillation regime down to the signal frequency. Measurements yield nearly quantum-limited operation, at 2.8 GHz, owing to self-organization of the working point. Simulations describe the characteristics of our device well and indicate potential for wide bandwidth operation.
Nature Communications | 2016
Pasi Lähteenmäki; G. S. Paraoanu; Juha Hassel; Pertti J. Hakonen
The existence of vacuum fluctuations is one of the most important predictions of modern quantum field theory. In the vacuum state, fluctuations occurring at different frequencies are uncorrelated. However, if a parameter in the Lagrangian of the field is modulated by an external pump, vacuum fluctuations stimulate spontaneous downconversion processes, creating squeezing between modes symmetric with respect to half of the frequency of the pump. Here we show that by double parametric pumping of a superconducting microwave cavity, it is possible to generate another type of correlation, namely coherence between photons in separate frequency modes. The coherence correlations are tunable by the phases of the pumps and are established by a quantum fluctuation that stimulates the simultaneous creation of two photon pairs. Our analysis indicates that the origin of this vacuum-induced coherence is the absence of which-way information in the frequency space.
Journal of Low Temperature Physics | 2014
Pasi Lähteenmäki; Visa Vesterinen; Juha Hassel; G. S. Paraoanu; Heikki Seppä; Pertti J. Hakonen
Low-noise amplification at microwave frequencies has become increasingly important for the research related to superconducting qubits and nanoelectromechanical systems. The fundamental limit of added noise by a phase-preserving amplifier is the standard quantum limit, often expressed as noise temperature
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016
Teemu Nieminen; Pasi Lähteenmäki; Zhenbing Tan; Daniel Cox; Pertti J. Hakonen
Scientific Reports | 2018
Z. B. Tan; T. Elo; A. Puska; J. Sarkar; Pasi Lähteenmäki; F. Duerr; C. Gould; L. W. Molenkamp; K. E. Nagaev; Pertti J. Hakonen
T_q=\hbar \omega /2k_B
international conference on noise and fluctuations | 2017
Pasi Lähteenmäki; G. S. Paraoanu; Pertti J. Hakonen
Applied Physics Letters | 2015
Pasi Häkkinen; Aurelien Fay; Dmitry Golubev; Pasi Lähteenmäki; Pertti J. Hakonen
Tq=ħω/2kB. Towards the goal of the quantum limit, we have developed an amplifier based on intrinsic negative resistance of a selectively damped Josephson junction. Here we present measurement results on previously proposed wide-band microwave amplification and discuss the challenges for improvements on the existing designs. We have also studied flux-pumped metamaterial-based parametric amplifiers, whose operating frequency can be widely tuned by external DC-flux, and demonstrate operation at
arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2013
Pasi Lähteenmäki; G. S. Paraoanu; Juha Hassel; Pertti J. Hakonen