Waltraut Wustmann
Chalmers University of Technology
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Featured researches published by Waltraut Wustmann.
Physical Review B | 2013
Waltraut Wustmann; Vitaly Shumeiko
We develop a theory of parametric resonance in tunable superconducting cavities. The nonlinearity introduced by the superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) attached to the cavity and damping due to connection of the cavity to a transmission line are taken into consideration. We study in detail the nonlinear classical dynamics of the cavity field below and above the parametric threshold for the degenerate parametric resonance, featuring regimes of multistability and parametric radiation. We investigate the phase-sensitive amplification of external signals on resonance, as well as amplification of detuned signals, and relate the amplifier performance to that of linear parametric amplifiers. We also discuss applications of the device for dispersive qubit readout. Beyond the classical response of the cavity, we investigate small quantum fluctuations around the amplified classical signals. We evaluate the noise power spectrum both for the internal field in the cavity and the output field. Other quantum-statistical properties of the noise are addressed such as squeezing spectra, second-order coherence, and two-mode entanglement.
Physical Review B | 2014
X. Zhou; Vivien Schmitt; Patrice Bertet; D. Vion; Waltraut Wustmann; Vitaly Shumeiko; Daniel Esteve
We have developed and measured a high-gain quantum-limited microwave parametric amplifier based on a superconducting lumped LC resonator with the inductor L including an array of eight superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs). This amplifier is parametrically pumped by modulating the flux threading the SQUIDs at twice the resonator frequency. Around 5 GHz, a maximum gain of 31 dB, a product amplitude gain x bandwidth above 60 MHz, and a 1 dB compression point of -123 dBm at 20 dB gain are obtained in the nondegenerate mode of operation. Phase-sensitive amplification-deamplification is also measured in the degenerate mode and yields a maximum gain of 37 dB. The compression point obtained is 18 dB above what would be obtained with a single SQUID of the same inductance, due to the smaller nonlinearity of the SQUID array.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2015
Michael Roger Andre Simoen; C. W. S. Chang; Philip Krantz; Jonas Bylander; Waltraut Wustmann; Vitaly Shumeiko; Per Delsing; Christopher Wilson
We characterize a Josephson parametric amplifier based on a flux-tunable quarter-wavelength resonator. The fundamental resonance frequency is ∼1 GHz, but we use higher modes of the resonator for our measurements. An on-chip tuning line allows for magnetic flux pumping of the amplifier. We investigate and compare degenerate parametric amplification, involving a single mode, and nondegenerate parametric amplification, using a pair of modes. We show that we reach quantum-limited noise performance in both cases.
Physical review applied | 2017
Waltraut Wustmann; Vitaly Shumeiko
We develop a theory for non-degenerate parametric resonance in a tunable superconducting cavity. We focus on nonlinear effects that are caused by nonlinear Josephson elements connected to the cavity. We analyze parametric amplification in a strong nonlinear regime at the parametric instability threshold, and calculate maximum gain values. Above the threshold, in the parametric oscillator regime the linear cavity response diverges at the oscillator frequency at all pump strengths. We show that this divergence is related to the continuous degeneracy of the free oscillator state with respect to the phase. Applying on-resonance input lifts the degeneracy and removes the divergence. We also investigate the quantum noise squeezing. It is shown that in the strong amplification regime the noise undergoes four-mode squeezing, and that in this regime the output signal to noise ratio can significantly exceed the input value. We also analyze the intermode frequency conversion and identify parameters at which full conversion is achieved.
Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2018
Ida-Maria Svensson; Mathieu Pierre; Michael Roger Andre Simoen; Waltraut Wustmann; Philip Krantz; Andreas Bengtsson; Göran Johansson; Jonas Bylander; Vitaly Shumeiko; Per Delsing
We have created a doubly tunable resonator, with the intention to simulate relativistic motion of the resonator boundaries in real space. Our device is a superconducting coplanar-waveguide microwave resonator, with fundamental resonant frequency ω 1 / (2 π ) ~ 5 GHz. Both of its ends are terminated to ground via dc-SQUIDs, which serve as magnetic-flux-controlled inductances. Applying a flux to either SQUID allows the tuning of ω 1 / (2 π ) by approximately 700 MHz. Using two separate on-chip magnetic-flux lines, we modulate the SQUIDs with two tones of equal frequency, close to 2 ω 1 . We observe photon generation, at ω 1 , above a certain pump amplitude threshold. By varying the relative phase of the two pumps we are able to control this threshold, in good agreement with a theoretical model. At the same time, some of our observations deviate from the theoretical predictions, which we attribute to parasitic couplings resulting in current driving of the SQUIDs
Optics InfoBase Conference Papers: Quantum Information and Measurement, QIM 2017; Paris; France; 5 April 2017 through 7 April 2017 | 2017
Waltraut Wustmann; Vitaly Shumeiko
Nonlinear amplification, and nonlinear frequency conversion between cavity eigen modes is theoretically investigated. Parametric oscillation, and gains below and above instability threshold are analyzed. Vacuum noise squeezing is evaluated and output noise-tosignal ratio is calculated.
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Waltraut Wustmann; Kevin Osborn
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2017
Waltraut Wustmann; Vitaly Shumeiko
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Waltraut Wustmann; Kevin Osborn
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Andreas Bengtsson; Waltraut Wustmann; Vitaly Shumeiko; Per Delsing; Jonas Bylander