Observation of the Dynamical Casimir Effect in a Superconducting Circuit
C.M. Wilson, G. Johansson, A. Pourkabirian, J.R. Johansson, T. Duty,, F. Nori, P. Delsing

TL;DR
This paper reports the first direct observation of the dynamical Casimir effect in a superconducting circuit, demonstrating real photon creation from vacuum fluctuations and quantum correlations.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental evidence of the dynamical Casimir effect using a superconducting circuit with a modulated SQUID.
Findings
Observation of real photon generation from vacuum fluctuations
Detection of two-mode squeezing indicating quantum nature
Controlled modulation of circuit length at high frequencies
Abstract
One of the most surprising predictions of modern quantum theory is that the vacuum of space is not empty. In fact, quantum theory predicts that it teems with virtual particles flitting in and out of existence. While initially a curiosity, it was quickly realized that these vacuum fluctuations had measurable consequences, for instance producing the Lamb shift of atomic spectra and modifying the magnetic moment for the electron. This type of renormalization due to vacuum fluctuations is now central to our understanding of nature. However, these effects provide indirect evidence for the existence of vacuum fluctuations. From early on, it was discussed if it might instead be possible to more directly observe the virtual particles that compose the quantum vacuum. 40 years ago, Moore suggested that a mirror undergoing relativistic motion could convert virtual photons into directly observable…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsMembrane Separation and Gas Transport
