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Dive into the research topics where Srivatsan Chakram is active.

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Featured researches published by Srivatsan Chakram.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Measurement-Induced Localization of an Ultracold Lattice Gas.

Yogesh Sharad Patil; Srivatsan Chakram; Mukund Vengalattore

The process of measurement can modify the state of a quantum system and its subsequent evolution. Here, we demonstrate the control of quantum tunneling in an ultracold lattice gas by the measurement backaction imposed by the act of imaging the atoms, i.e., light scattering. By varying the rate of light scattering from the atomic ensemble, we show the crossover from the weak measurement regime, where position measurements have little influence on tunneling dynamics, to the strong measurement regime, where measurement-induced localization causes a large suppression of tunneling--a manifestation of the quantum Zeno effect. Our study realizes an experimental demonstration of the paradigmatic Heisenberg microscope and sheds light on the implications of measurement on the coherent evolution of a quantum system.We demonstrate the control of quantum tunneling in an ultracold lattice gas by the measurement backaction imposed by an imaging process. A in situ imaging technique is used to acquire repeated images of an ultracold gas confined in a shallow optical lattice. The backaction induced by these position measurements modifies the coherent quantum tunneling of atoms within the lattice. By smoothly varying the rate at which spatial information is extracted from the atomic ensemble, we observe the continuous crossover from the ‘weak measurement regime’ where position measurements have little influence on the tunneling dynamics, to the ‘strong measurement regime’ where measurement-induced localization causes a large suppression of tunneling. This suppression of coherent tunneling is a manifestation of the Quantum Zeno effect. Our study realizes an experimental demonstration of the paradigmatic Heisenberg microscope in a lattice gas and sheds light on the implications of quantum measurement on the coherent evolution of a mesoscopic quantum system. In addition, this demonstrates a powerful technique for the control of an interacting many-body quantum system via spatially resolved measurement backaction.


Physical Review A | 2014

Nondestructive imaging of an ultracold lattice gas

Yogesh Sharad Patil; Srivatsan Chakram; L. M. Aycock; Mukund Vengalattore

We demonstrate the nondestructive imaging of a lattice gas of ultracold bosons. Atomic fluorescence is induced in the simultaneous presence of degenerate Raman sideband cooling. The combined influence of these processes controllably cycles an atom between a dark state and a fluorescing state while eliminating heating and loss. Through spatially resolved sideband spectroscopy following the imaging sequence, we demonstrate the efficacy of this imaging technique in various regimes of lattice depth and fluorescence acquisition rate. Our work provides an important extension of quantum gas imaging to the nondestructive detection, control and manipulation of atoms in optical lattices. In addition, our technique can also be extended to atomic species that are less amenable to molasses-based lattice imaging.


Nature Communications | 2017

Random access quantum information processors using multimode circuit quantum electrodynamics

Ravi Naik; Nelson Leung; Srivatsan Chakram; Peter Groszkowski; Yao Lu; Nathan Earnest; D. C. McKay; Jens Koch; David Schuster

Qubit connectivity is an important property of a quantum processor, with an ideal processor having random access—the ability of arbitrary qubit pairs to interact directly. This a challenge with superconducting circuits, as state-of-the-art architectures rely on only nearest-neighbor coupling. Here, we implement a random access superconducting quantum information processor, demonstrating universal operations on a nine-qubit memory, with a Josephson junction transmon circuit serving as the central processor. The quantum memory uses the eigenmodes of a linear array of coupled superconducting resonators. We selectively stimulate vacuum Rabi oscillations between the transmon and individual eigenmodes through parametric flux modulation of the transmon frequency. Utilizing these oscillations, we perform a universal set of quantum gates on 38 arbitrary pairs of modes and prepare multimode entangled states, all using only two control lines. We thus achieve hardware-efficient random access multi-qubit control in an architecture compatible with long-lived microwave cavity-based quantum memories.Despite their versatility, superconducting qubits such as transmons still have limited coherence times compared to resonators. Here, the authors show how to use a single transmon to implement universal one-qubit and two-qubit operations among nine qubits encoded in superconducting resonators’ eigenmodes.


New Journal of Physics | 2015

Multimode phononic correlations in a nondegenerate parametric amplifier

Srivatsan Chakram; Yogesh Sharad Patil; Mukund Vengalattore

We describe the realization of multimode phononic correlations that arise from nonlinear interactions in a mechanical nondegenerate parametric amplifier. The nature of these correlations differs qualitatively depending on the strength of the driving field in relation to the threshold for parametric instability. Below this threshold, the correlations are manifest in a combined quadrature of the coupled mechanical modes. In this regime, the system is amenable to back-action evading measurement schemes for the detection of weak forces. Above threshold, the correlations are manifest in the amplitude difference between the two mechanical modes, akin to intensity difference squeezing observed in optical parametric oscillators. We discuss the crossover of correlations between these two regimes and applications of this quantum-compatible mechanical system to nonlinear metrology and out-of-equilibrium dynamics.


Nature Communications | 2018

Publisher Correction: Random access quantum information processors using multimode circuit quantum electrodynamics

Ravi Naik; Nelson Leung; Srivatsan Chakram; Peter Groszkowski; Yao Lu; Nathan Earnest; D. C. McKay; Jens Koch; David Schuster

In the original version of this Article, the affiliation details for Peter Groszkowski and Jens Koch were incorrectly given as ‘Department of Physics, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, 60637, USA’, instead of the correct ‘Department of Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208, USA’. This has now been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Universal Stabilization of a Parametrically Coupled Qubit

Yao Lu; Srivatsan Chakram; Nelson Leung; Nathan Earnest; Ravi Naik; Ziwen Huang; Peter Groszkowski; Eliot Kapit; Jens Koch; David Schuster


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016

Nonlinear phonon interferometry at the Heisenberg limit

Hil F. H. Cheung; Yogesh Sharad Patil; Laura Chang; Srivatsan Chakram; Mukund Vengalattore


arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2018

Deterministic Bidirectional Communication and Remote Entanglement Generation Between Superconducting Quantum Processors

Nelson Leung; Yao Lu; Srivatsan Chakram; Ravi Naik; Nathan Earnest; Ruichao Ma; Kurt Jacobs; A. N. Cleland; David Schuster


Physical Review Letters | 2018

Realization of a Λ System with Metastable States of a Capacitively Shunted Fluxonium

Nathan Earnest; Srivatsan Chakram; Yao Lu; Nicholas Irons; Ravi Naik; Nelson Leung; Leo Ocola; David A. Czaplewski; Brian Baker; Jay Lawrence; Jens Koch; David Schuster


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

Raman Transitions in a Capacitively shunted Fluxonium Circuit

Nathan Earnest; Srivatsan Chakram; Yao Lu; Nicholas Irons; Ravi Naik; Nelson Leung; Leonidas E. Ocola; David A. Czaplewski; Brian Baker; Walter Lawrence; Jens Koch; David Schuster

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Ravi Naik

University of Chicago

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Jens Koch

Northwestern University

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Yao Lu

University of Chicago

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