Cosmological flux noise and measured noise power spectra in SQUIDs
Christian Beck

TL;DR
This paper proposes that cosmological primordial fluctuations from the early universe could be a significant source of the 1/f flux noise observed in superconducting devices like SQUIDs, linking cosmology with quantum device noise.
Contribution
It introduces a model where primordial cosmological fluctuations explain the observed flux noise spectra in SQUIDs, connecting early universe physics with quantum device measurements.
Findings
The flux noise spectrum matches the primordial power spectrum with spectral index n_s=0.96.
Predicted flux noise amplitude at 1Hz is δΦ/Φ_0 = 3.41×10^{-6}.
Model predictions align well with experimental measurements.
Abstract
The understanding of the origin of magnetic flux noise commonly observed in superconducting devices such as SQUIDS and qubits is still a major unsolved puzzle. Here we discuss the possibility that a significant part of the observed low-frequency flux noise measured in these devices is ultimately seeded by cosmological fluctuations. We consider a theory where a primordial flux noise field left over in unchanged form from an early inflationary or quantum gravity epoch of the universe intrinsically influences the phase difference in SQUIDs and qubits. The perturbation seeds generated by this field can explain in a quantitatively correct way the form and amplitude of measured low-frequency flux noise spectra in SQUID devices if one takes as a source of fluctuations the primordial power spectrum of curvature fluctuations as measured by the Planck collaboration. Our model predicts flux…
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