Circuit quantum electrodynamics with a nonlinear resonator
P. Bertet, F. R. Ong, M. Boissonneault, A. Bolduc, F., Mallet, A. C. Doherty, A. Blais, D. Vion, D. Esteve

TL;DR
This paper explores the physics of a nonlinear superconducting resonator coupled to a qubit, highlighting phenomena like bistability and squeezing, and demonstrates its application in high-fidelity qubit readout within circuit quantum electrodynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a nonlinear Jaynes-Cummings model with Kerr nonlinearity in cQED, enabling new quantum effects and improved qubit measurement techniques.
Findings
Bistability in nonlinear resonators can be harnessed for qubit readout.
Strong coupling with nonlinear effects enriches quantum dynamics.
Quantum backaction impacts qubit coherence and measurement fidelity.
Abstract
One of the most studied model systems in quantum optics is a two-level atom strongly coupled to a single mode of the electromagnetic field stored in a cavity, a research field named cavity quantum electrodynamics or CQED. CQED has recently received renewed attention due to its implementation with superconducting artificial atoms and coplanar resonators in the so-called circuit quantum electrodynamics (cQED) architecture. In cQED, the couplings can be much stronger than in CQED due to the design flexibility of superconducting circuits and to the enhanced field confinement in one-dimensional cavities. This enabled the realization of fundamental quantum physics and quantum information processing experiments with a degree of control comparable to that obtained in CQED. The purpose of this chapter is to investigate the situation where the resonator to which the atom is coupled is made…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
