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Dive into the research topics where Stefan Filipp is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefan Filipp.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2008

Coplanar waveguide resonators for circuit quantum electrodynamics

M. Göppl; A. Fragner; M. Baur; R. Bianchetti; Stefan Filipp; J. M. Fink; P. J. Leek; G. Puebla; L. Steffen; A. Wallraff

High quality on-chip microwave resonators have recently found prominent new applications in quantum optics and quantum information processing experiments with superconducting electronic circuits, a field now known as circuit quantum electrodynamics (QED). They are also used as single photon detectors and parametric amplifiers. Here we analyze the physical properties of coplanar waveguide resonators and their relation to the materials properties for use in circuit QED. We have designed and fabricated resonators with fundamental frequencies from 2 to 9 GHz and quality factors ranging from a few hundreds to a several hundred thousands controlled by appropriately designed input and output coupling capacitors. The microwave transmission spectra measured at temperatures of 20 mK are shown to be in good agreement with theoretical lumped element and distributed element transmission matrix models. In particular, the experimentally determined resonance frequencies, quality factors, and insertion losses are fully an...


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Observation of resonant photon blockade at microwave frequencies using correlation function measurements.

C. Lang; Deniz Bozyigit; C. Eichler; L. Steffen; J. M. Fink; A. A. Abdumalikov Jr.; M. Baur; Stefan Filipp; da Silva Mp; Alexandre Blais; A. Wallraff

Creating a train of single photons and monitoring its propagation and interaction is challenging in most physical systems, as photons generally interact very weakly with other systems. However, when confining microwave frequency photons in a transmission line resonator, effective photon-photon interactions can be mediated by qubits embedded in the resonator. Here, we observe the phenomenon of photon blockade through second-order correlation function measurements. The experiments clearly demonstrate antibunching in a continuously pumped source of single microwave photons measured by using microwave beam splitters, linear amplifiers, and quadrature amplitude detectors. We also investigate resonance fluorescence and Rayleigh scattering in Mollow-triplet-like spectra.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Dressed Collective Qubit States and the Tavis-Cummings Model in Circuit QED

J. M. Fink; R. Bianchetti; M. Baur; M. Göppl; L. Steffen; Stefan Filipp; P. J. Leek; Alexandre Blais; A. Wallraff

We present an ideal realization of the Tavis-Cummings model in the absence of atom number and coupling fluctuations by embedding a discrete number of fully controllable superconducting qubits at fixed positions into a transmission line resonator. Measuring the vacuum Rabi mode splitting with one, two, and three qubits strongly coupled to the cavity field, we explore both bright and dark dressed collective multiqubit states and observe the discrete square root N scaling of the collective dipole coupling strength. Our experiments demonstrate a novel approach to explore collective states, such as the W state, in a fully globally and locally controllable quantum system. Our scalable approach is interesting for solid-state quantum information processing and for fundamental multiatom quantum optics experiments with fixed atom numbers.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Observation of Two-Mode Squeezing in the Microwave Frequency Domain

C. Eichler; Deniz Bozyigit; C. Lang; M. Baur; L. Steffen; J. M. Fink; Stefan Filipp; A. Wallraff

Continuous variable entanglement between two modes of a radiation field is usually studied at optical frequencies. As an important step towards the observation of entanglement between propagating microwave photons we demonstrate the experimental state reconstruction of two field modes in the microwave domain. In particular, we generate two-mode correlated states with a Josephson parametric amplifier and detect all four quadrature components simultaneously in a two-channel heterodyne setup using amplitude detectors. Analyzing two-dimensional phase space histograms for all possible pairs of quadratures allows us to determine the full covariance matrix and reconstruct the four-dimensional Wigner function. We demonstrate strong correlations between the quadrature amplitude noise in the two modes. Under ideal conditions two-mode squeezing below the standard quantum limit should be observable in future experiments.


Nature | 2013

Experimental realization of non-Abelian non-adiabatic geometric gates

A. A. Abdumalikov Jr.; J. M. Fink; Kristinn Juliusson; Marek Pechal; S. Berger; A. Wallraff; Stefan Filipp

The geometric aspects of quantum mechanics are emphasized most prominently by the concept of geometric phases, which are acquired whenever a quantum system evolves along a path in Hilbert space, that is, the space of quantum states of the system. The geometric phase is determined only by the shape of this path and is, in its simplest form, a real number. However, if the system has degenerate energy levels, then matrix-valued geometric state transformations, known as non-Abelian holonomies—the effect of which depends on the order of two consecutive paths—can be obtained. They are important, for example, for the creation of synthetic gauge fields in cold atomic gases or the description of non-Abelian anyon statistics. Moreover, there are proposals to exploit non-Abelian holonomic gates for the purposes of noise-resilient quantum computation. In contrast to Abelian geometric operations, non-Abelian ones have been observed only in nuclear quadrupole resonance experiments with a large number of spins, and without full characterization of the geometric process and its non-commutative nature. Here we realize non-Abelian non-adiabatic holonomic quantum operations on a single, superconducting, artificial three-level atom by applying a well-controlled, two-tone microwave drive. Using quantum process tomography, we determine fidelities of the resulting non-commuting gates that exceed 95 per cent. We show that two different quantum gates, originating from two distinct paths in Hilbert space, yield non-equivalent transformations when applied in different orders. This provides evidence for the non-Abelian character of the implemented holonomic quantum operations. In combination with a non-trivial two-quantum-bit gate, our method suggests a way to universal holonomic quantum computing.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Two-qubit state tomography using a joint dispersive readout.

Stefan Filipp; P. Maurer; P. J. Leek; M. Baur; R. Bianchetti; J. M. Fink; M. Göppl; L. Steffen; Jay Gambetta; Alexandre Blais; A. Wallraff

Quantum state tomography is an important tool in quantum information science for complete characterization of multiqubit states and their correlations. Here we report a method to perform a joint simultaneous readout of two superconducting qubits dispersively coupled to the same mode of a microwave transmission line resonator. The nonlinear dependence of the resonator transmission on the qubit state dependent cavity frequency allows us to extract the full two-qubit correlations without the need for single-shot readout of individual qubits. We employ standard tomographic techniques to reconstruct the density matrix of two-qubit quantum states.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Measurement of Autler-Townes and Mollow Transitions in a Strongly Driven Superconducting Qubit

M. Baur; Stefan Filipp; R. Bianchetti; J. M. Fink; M. Göppl; L. Steffen; P. J. Leek; Alexandre Blais; A. Wallraff

We present spectroscopic measurements of the Autler-Townes doublet and the sidebands of the Mollow triplet in a driven superconducting qubit. The ground to first excited state transition of the qubit is strongly pumped while the resulting dressed qubit spectrum is probed with a weak tone. The corresponding transitions are detected using dispersive readout of the qubit coupled off resonantly to a microwave transmission line resonator. The observed frequencies of the Autler-Townes and Mollow spectral lines are in good agreement with a dispersive Jaynes-Cummings model taking into account higher excited qubit states and dispersive level shifts due to off-resonant drives.


Physical Review B | 2009

Using Sideband Transitions for Two-Qubit Operations in Superconducting Circuits

P. J. Leek; Stefan Filipp; P. Maurer; M. Baur; R. Bianchetti; J. M. Fink; M. Göppl; L. Steffen; A. Wallraff

We demonstrate the time-resolved driving of two-photon blue sideband transitions between superconducting qubits and a transmission line resonator. As an example of using these sideband transitions for a two-qubit operation, we implement a pulse sequence that first entangles one qubit with the resonator and subsequently distributes the entanglement between two qubits. We show the generation of 75% fidelity Bell states by this method. The full density matrix of the two-qubit system is extracted using joint measurement and quantum state tomography and shows close agreement with numerical simulation.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Cavity Quantum Electrodynamics with Separate Photon Storage and Qubit Readout Modes

P. J. Leek; M. Baur; J. M. Fink; R. Bianchetti; L. Steffen; Stefan Filipp; A. Wallraff

We present the realization of a cavity quantum electrodynamics setup in which photons of strongly different lifetimes are engineered in different harmonic modes of the same cavity. We achieve this in a superconducting transmission line resonator with superconducting qubits coupled to the different modes. One cavity mode is strongly coupled to a detection line for qubit state readout, while a second long lifetime mode is used for photon storage and coherent quantum operations. We demonstrate sideband-based measurement of photon coherence, generation of n photon Fock states and the scaling of the sideband Rabi frequency with square root of n using a scheme that may be extended to realize sideband-based two-qubit logic gates.


Physical Review X | 2015

Digital Quantum Simulation of Spin Models with Circuit Quantum Electrodynamics

Yves Salathe; Mintu Mondal; Markus Oppliger; Johannes Heinsoo; Philipp Kurpiers; Anton Potočnik; Antonio Mezzacapo; Urtzi Las Heras García; Lucas Lamata Manuel; Enrique Leónidas Solano Villanueva; Stefan Filipp; A. Wallraff

Systems of interacting quantum spins show a rich spectrum of quantum phases and display interesting many-body dynamics. Computing characteristics of even small systems on conventional computers poses significant challenges. A quantum simulator has the potential to outperform standard computers in calculating the evolution of complex quantum systems. Here, we perform a digital quantum simulation of the paradigmatic Heisenberg and Ising interacting spin models using a two transmon-qubit circuit quantum electrodynamics setup. We make use of the exchange interaction naturally present in the simulator to construct a digital decomposition of the model-specific evolution and extract its full dynamics. This approach is universal and efficient, employing only resources which are polynomial in the number of spins and indicates a path towards the controlled simulation of general spin dynamics in superconducting qubit platforms.

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Yuji Hasegawa

Vienna University of Technology

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Alexandre Blais

Canadian Institute for Advanced Research

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