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Dive into the research topics where T. Meno is active.

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Featured researches published by T. Meno.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Vacuum Rabi Oscillations in a Macroscopic Superconducting Qubit LC Oscillator System

J. Johansson; Shiro Saito; T. Meno; Hayato Nakano; Masahito Ueda; Kouichi Semba; Hideaki Takayanagi

We have observed the coherent exchange of a single energy quantum between a flux qubit and a superconducting LC circuit acting as a quantum harmonic oscillator. The exchange of an energy quantum is known as the vacuum Rabi oscillation: the qubit is oscillating between the excited state and the ground state and the oscillator between the vacuum state and the first excited state. We also show that we can detect the state of the oscillator with the qubit and thereby obtained evidence of level quantization of the LC circuit. Our results support the idea of using oscillators as couplers of solid-state qubits.


Nature Physics | 2008

Two-photon probe of the Jaynes–Cummings model and controlled symmetry breaking in circuit QED

F. Deppe; Matteo Mariantoni; E. P. Menzel; A. Marx; Shiro Saito; K. Kakuyanagi; Hirotaka Tanaka; T. Meno; K. Semba; H. Takayanagi; E. Solano; R. Gross

Superconducting qubits behave as artificial two-level atoms and are used to investigate fundamental quantum phenomena. In this context, the study of multi-photon excitations occupies a central role. Moreover, coupling superconducting qubits to on-chip microwave resonators has given rise to the field of circuit QED. In contrast to quantum-optical cavity QED, circuit QED offers the tunability inherent to solid-state circuits. In this work, we report on the observation of key signatures of a two-photon driven Jaynes-Cummings model, which unveils the upconversion dynamics of a superconducting flux qubit coupled to an on-chip resonator. Our experiment and theoretical analysis show clear evidence for the coexistence of one- and two-photon driven level anticrossings of the qubit-resonator system. This results from the symmetry breaking of the system Hamiltonian, when parity becomes a not well-defined property. Our study provides deep insight into the interplay of multiphoton processes and symmetries in a qubit-resonator system.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Dephasing of a superconducting flux qubit.

K. Kakuyanagi; T. Meno; Shiro Saito; Hayato Nakano; K. Semba; Hideaki Takayanagi; F. Deppe; Alexander Shnirman

In order to gain a better understanding of the origin of decoherence in superconducting flux qubits, we have measured the magnetic field dependence of the characteristic energy relaxation time (T(1)) and echo phase relaxation time (T(2)(echo)) near the optimal operating point of a flux qubit. We have measured T(2)(echo) by means of the phase cycling method. At the optimal point, we found the relation T(2)(echo) approximately 2T(1). This means that the echo decay time is limited by the energy relaxation (T(1) process). Moving away from the optimal point, we observe a linear increase of the phase relaxation rate (1/T(2)(echo)) with the applied external magnetic flux. This behavior can be well explained by the influence of magnetic flux noise with a 1/f spectrum on the qubit.


Nature Physics | 2008

Two-photon probe of the Jaynes-Cummings model and symmetry breaking in circuit QED

F. Deppe; Matteo Mariantoni; E. P. Menzel; A. Marx; Shiro Saito; K. Kakuyanagi; Hirotaka Tanaka; T. Meno; Kouichi Semba; Hideaki Takayanagi; E. Solano; Rudolf Gross

Superconducting qubits behave as artificial two-level atoms and are used to investigate fundamental quantum phenomena. In this context, the study of multi-photon excitations occupies a central role. Moreover, coupling superconducting qubits to on-chip microwave resonators has given rise to the field of circuit QED. In contrast to quantum-optical cavity QED, circuit QED offers the tunability inherent to solid-state circuits. In this work, we report on the observation of key signatures of a two-photon driven Jaynes-Cummings model, which unveils the upconversion dynamics of a superconducting flux qubit coupled to an on-chip resonator. Our experiment and theoretical analysis show clear evidence for the coexistence of one- and two-photon driven level anticrossings of the qubit-resonator system. This results from the symmetry breaking of the system Hamiltonian, when parity becomes a not well-defined property. Our study provides deep insight into the interplay of multiphoton processes and symmetries in a qubit-resonator system.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Parametric control of a superconducting flux qubit.

Shiro Saito; T. Meno; Masahito Ueda; H. Tanaka; Kouichi Semba; Hideaki Takayanagi

Parametric control of a superconducting flux qubit has been achieved by using two-frequency microwave pulses. We have observed Rabi oscillations stemming from parametric transitions between the qubit states when the sum of the two microwave frequencies or the difference between them matches the qubit Larmor frequency. We have also observed multiphoton Rabi oscillations corresponding to one- to four-photon resonances by applying single-frequency microwave pulses. The parametric control demonstrated in this work widens the frequency range of microwaves for controlling the qubit and offers a high quality testing ground for exploring nonlinear quantum phenomena of macroscopically distinct states.


Physical Review B | 2007

Phase-Coherent Dynamics of a Superconducting Flux Qubit with Capacitive-Bias Readout

F. Deppe; Matteo Mariantoni; E. P. Menzel; Shiro Saito; K. Kakuyanagi; H. Tanaka; T. Meno; K. Semba; Hideaki Takayanagi; Rudolf Gross

We present a systematic study of the phase coherent dynamics of a superconducting three-Josephson-junction flux qubit. The qubit state is detected with the integrated-pulse method, which is a variant of the pulsed switching-dc-superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) method. In this scheme, the dc SQUID bias current pulse is applied via a capacitor instead of a resistor, giving rise to a narrow bandpass instead of a pure low-pass filter configuration of the electromagnetic environment. Measuring one and the same qubit with both setups allows a direct comparison. With the capacitive method about four times faster switching pulses and an increased visibility are achieved. Furthermore, the deliberate engineering of the electromagnetic environment, which minimizes the noise due to the bias circuit, is facilitated. Right at the degeneracy point, the qubit coherence is limited by energy relaxation. We find two main noise contributions. White noise limits the energy relaxation and contributes to the dephasing far from the degeneracy point.


Journal of the Physical Society of Japan | 2006

Tunnelling spectroscopy of the interface between Sr2RuO4 and a single ru micro-inclusion in eutectic crystals

Hiroshi Yaguchi; Keiichi Takizawa; Minoru Kawamura; Naoki Kikugawa; Yoshiteru Maeno; T. Meno; Tatsushi Akazaki; Kouichi Semba; Hideaki Takayanagi

1∕f


LOW TEMPERATURE PHYSICS: 24th International Conference on Low Temperature Physics - LT24 | 2006

Coherent Control of Coupled Superconducting Macroscopic Quantum Systems

Kouichi Semba; Shiro Saito; T. Meno; J. Johansson; Hideaki Takayanagi

noise is the dominant source of dephasing in the direct vicinity of the optimal point. The influence of


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2009

Two-photon probe of the Jaynes-Cummings model and controlled symmetry breaking in circuit QED

F. Deppe; Matteo Mariantoni; E. P. Menzel; A. Marx; R. Gross; Shiro Saito; K. Kakuyanagi; Hirotaka Tanaka; K. Semba; T. Meno; Hideaki Takayanagi; E. Solano

1∕f


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2007

Dephasing of a superconducting flux qubit

K. Kakuyanagi; T. Meno; Shiro Saito; Hayato Nakano; K. Semba; Hideaki Takayanagi; F. Deppe; Alexander Shnirman

noise is also supported by nonrandom beatings in the Ramsey and spin echo decay traces. Numeric simulations of a coupled qubit-oscillator system indicate that these beatings are due to the resonant interaction of the qubit with at least one pointlike fluctuator, coupled especially strongly to the qubit.

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Shiro Saito

University of Tokushima

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Hideaki Takayanagi

Tokyo University of Science

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Kouichi Semba

National Institute of Information and Communications Technology

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K. Kakuyanagi

Nippon Telegraph and Telephone

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K. Semba

Nippon Telegraph and Telephone

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Hayato Nakano

Nippon Telegraph and Telephone

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E. Solano

University of the Basque Country

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Masahito Ueda

College of Science and Technology

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