Photon Generation from Quantum Vacuum using a Josephson Metamaterial
P. L\"ahteenm\"aki, G. S. Paraoanu, J. Hassel, and P. J. Hakonen

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that photon generation in a Josephson metamaterial circuit is due to the dynamical Casimir effect originating from the quantum vacuum, confirmed through classical simulations and experimental data.
Contribution
It provides a simple circuit model analysis showing quantum vacuum photon generation and distinguishes it from classical noise effects.
Findings
Photon spectrum shows two asymmetric branches with classical noise
Experimental data confirms symmetric photon branches as predicted by the dynamical Casimir effect
Simulation indicates photons originate from quantum vacuum, not classical noise
Abstract
When one of the parameters in the Euler-Lagrange equations of motion of a system is modulated, particles can be generated out of the quantum vacuum. This phenomenon is known as the dynamical Casimir effect, and it was recently realized experimentally in systems of superconducting circuits, for example by using modulated resonators made of coplanar waveguides, or arrays of superconducting quantum intereference devices (SQUIDs) forming a Josephson metamaterial. In this paper, we consider a simple electrical circuit model for dynamical Casimir effects, consisting of an LC resonator, with the inductor modulated externally at 10.8 GHz and with the resonant frequency tunable over a range of 400 MHz around 5.4 GHz. The circuit is analyzed classically using a circuit simulator (APLAC). We demonstrate that if an additional source of classical noise couples to the resonator (on top of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Quantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect
