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Dive into the research topics where Roberto Stassi is active.

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Featured researches published by Roberto Stassi.


ACS Nano | 2014

Ultrastrong Coupling of Plasmons and Excitons in a Nanoshell

Adriano Cacciola; Omar Di Stefano; Roberto Stassi; Rosalba Saija; Salvatore Savasta

The strong coupling regime of hybrid plasmonic-molecular systems is a subject of great interest for its potential to control and engineer light-matter interactions at the nanoscale. Recently, the so-called ultrastrong coupling regime, which is achieved when the light-matter coupling rate reaches a considerable fraction of the emitter transition frequency, has been realized in semiconductor and superconducting systems and in organic molecules embedded in planar microcavities or coupled to surface plasmons. Here we explore the possibility to achieve this regime of light-matter interaction at nanoscale dimensions. We demonstrate by accurate scattering calculations that this regime can be reached in nanoshells constituted by a core of organic molecules surrounded by a silver or gold shell. These hybrid nanoparticles can be exploited for the design of all-optical ultrafast plasmonic nanocircuits and -devices.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Spontaneous conversion from virtual to real photons in the ultrastrong-coupling regime.

Roberto Stassi; A. Ridolfo; O. Di Stefano; Michael J. Hartmann; Salvatore Savasta

We show that a spontaneous release of virtual photon pairs can occur in a quantum optical system in the ultrastrong coupling regime. In this regime, which is attracting interest both in semiconductor and superconducting systems, the light-matter coupling rate Ω(R) becomes comparable to the bare resonance frequency of photons ω(0). In contrast to the dynamical Casimir effect and other pair creation mechanisms, this phenomenon does not require external forces or time dependent parameters in the Hamiltonian.


Physical Review A | 2015

Multiphoton quantum Rabi oscillations in ultrastrong cavity QED

Luigi Garziano; Roberto Stassi; Vincenzo Macrì; Anton Frisk Kockum; Salvatore Savasta; Franco Nori

When an atom is strongly coupled to a cavity, the two systems can exchange a single photon through a coherent Rabi oscillation. This process enables precise quantum-state engineering and manipulation of atoms and photons in a cavity, which play a central role in quantum information and measurement. Recently, a new regime of cavity QED was reached experimentally where the strength of the interaction between light and artificial atoms (qubits) becomes comparable to the atomic transition frequency or the resonance frequency of the cavity mode. Here we show that this regime can strongly modify the concept of vacuum Rabi oscillations, enabling multiphoton exchanges between the qubit and the resonator. We find that experimental state-of-the-art circuit-QED systems can undergo two- and three-photon vacuum Rabi oscillations. These anomalous Rabi oscillations can be exploited for the realization of efficient Fock-state sources of light and complex entangled states of qubits.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

One Photon Can Simultaneously Excite Two or More Atoms.

Luigi Garziano; Vincenzo Macrì; Roberto Stassi; Omar Di Stefano; Franco Nori; Salvatore Savasta

We consider two separate atoms interacting with a single-mode optical or microwave resonator. When the frequency of the resonator field is twice the atomic transition frequency, we show that there exists a resonant coupling between one photon and two atoms, via intermediate virtual states connected by counterrotating processes. If the resonator is prepared in its one-photon state, the photon can be jointly absorbed by the two atoms in their ground state which will both reach their excited state with a probability close to one. Like ordinary quantum Rabi oscillations, this process is coherent and reversible, so that two atoms in their excited state will undergo a downward transition jointly emitting a single cavity photon. This joint absorption and emission process can also occur with three atoms. The parameters used to investigate this process correspond to experimentally demonstrated values in circuit quantum electrodynamics systems.


Physical Review A | 2014

Vacuum-induced symmetry breaking in a superconducting quantum circuit

Luigi Garziano; Roberto Stassi; A. Ridolfo; O. Di Stefano; Salvatore Savasta

a † acquires a nonzero expectation value in the system ground state. We demonstrate that, in this case, the parity symmetry of an additional artificial atom with an even potential is broken by the interaction with the resonator. Such a mechanism is analogous to the Higgs mechanism where the gauge symmetry of the weak force’s gauge bosons is broken by the nonzero vacuum expectation value of the Higgs field. The results presented here open the way to controllable experiments on symmetry-breaking mechanisms induced by nonzero vacuum expectation values. Moreover, the mechanism proposed here can be used as a probe of the ground-state macroscopic coherence emerging from quantum phase transitions with vacuum degeneracy.


Physical Review A | 2017

Quantum nonlinear optics without photons

Roberto Stassi; Vincenzo Macrì; Anton Frisk Kockum; Omar Di Stefano; Adam Miranowicz; Salvatore Savasta; Franco Nori

Spontaneous parametric down-conversion is a well-known process in quantum nonlinear optics in which a photon incident on a nonlinear crystal spontaneously splits into two photons. Here we propose an analogous physical process where one excited atom directly transfers its excitation to a pair of spatially-separated atoms with probability approaching one. The interaction is mediated by the exchange of virtual rather than real photons. This nonlinear atomic process is coherent and reversible, so the pair of excited atoms can transfer the excitation back to the first one: the atomic analogue of sum-frequency generation of light. The parameters used to investigate this process correspond to experimentally-demonstrated values in ultrastrong circuit quantum electrodynamics. This approach can be extended to realize other nonlinear inter-atomic processes, such as four-atom mixing, and is an attractive architecture for the realization of quantum devices on a chip. We show that four-qubit mixing can efficiently implement quantum repetition codes and, thus, can be used for error-correction codes.


New Journal of Physics | 2017

Feynman-diagrams approach to the quantum Rabi model for ultrastrong cavity QED: stimulated emission and reabsorption of virtual particles dressing a physical excitation

Omar Di Stefano; Roberto Stassi; Luigi Garziano; Anton Frisk Kockum; Salvatore Savasta; Franco Nori

In quantum field theory, bare particles are dressed by a cloud of virtual particles to form physical particles. The virtual particles affect properties such as the mass and charge of the physical particles, and it is only these modified properties that can be measured in experiments, not the properties of the bare particles. The influence of virtual particles is prominent in the ultrastrong-coupling regime of cavity quantum electrodynamics (QED), which has recently been realised in several condensed-matter systems. In some of these systems, the effective interaction between atom-like transitions and the cavity photons can be switched on or off by external control pulses. This offers unprecedented possibilities for exploring quantum vacuum fluctuations and the relation between physical and bare particles. We consider a single three-level quantum system coupled to an optical resonator. Here we show that, by applying external electromagnetic pulses of suitable amplitude and frequency, each virtual photon dressing a physical excitation in cavity-QED systems can be converted into a physical observable photon, and back again. In this way, the hidden relationship between the bare and the physical excitations can be unravelled and becomes experimentally testable. The conversion between virtual and physical photons can be clearly pictured using Feynman diagrams with cut loops.


Physical Review A | 2015

Quantum control and long-range quantum correlations in dynamical Casimir arrays

Bernardo Spagnolo; Roberto Stassi; S. De Liberato; Luigi Garziano; Salvatore Savasta

The recent observation of the dynamical Casimir effect in a modulated superconducting waveguide, coronating thirty years of world-wide research, empowered the quantum technology community with a powerful tool to create entangled photons on-chip. In this work we show how, going beyond the single waveguide paradigm using a scalable array, it is possible to create multipartite nonclassical states, with the possibility to control the long-range quantum correlations of the emitted photons. In particular, our finite-temperature theory shows how maximally entangled


New Journal of Physics | 2016

Output Field-Quadrature Measurements and Squeezing in Ultrastrong Cavity-QED

Roberto Stassi; Salvatore Savasta; Luigi Garziano; Bernardo Spagnolo; Franco Nori

NOON


EPL | 2012

Delayed-choice quantum control of light-matter interaction

Roberto Stassi; A. Ridolfo; Salvatore Savasta; R. Girlanda; O. Di Stefano

states can be engineered in a realistic setup. The results here presented open the way to new kinds of quantum fluids of light, arising from modulated vacuum fluctuations in linear systems.

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Franco Nori

University of Michigan

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Anton Frisk Kockum

Chalmers University of Technology

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