Dynamics of transient cat-states in degenerate parametric oscillation with and without nonlinear Kerr interactions
R. Y. Teh, F.-X. Sun, R. E. S. Polkinghorne, Q. Y. He, Q. Gong, P. D., Drummond, and M. D. Reid

TL;DR
This paper investigates the formation, dynamics, and decoherence of transient cat-states in degenerate parametric oscillators, analyzing effects of Kerr nonlinearity and providing insights for generating larger, more robust cat-states in superconducting circuits.
Contribution
It offers a detailed analysis of how Kerr nonlinearity influences cat-state formation and decoherence, with simulations aligned to experimental parameters, advancing understanding of nonclassical state generation.
Findings
Kerr nonlinearity has minimal impact on the threshold for cat-state formation.
The quality of the cat-state improves with increased parametric nonlinearity.
Simulations match experimental results, confirming the generation of small cat-states in superconducting circuits.
Abstract
A cat-state is formed as the steady-state solution for the signal mode of an ideal, degenerate parametric oscillator, in the limit of negligible single-photon signal loss. In the presence of the signal loss, this is no longer true over timescales much longer than the damping time. However, for sufficient parametric nonlinearity, a cat-state can exist as a transient state. In this paper, we study the dynamics of the creation and decoherence of cat-states in degenerate parametric oscillation, both with and without the effect of a Kerr nonlinearity that applies to recent superconducting-circuit experiments generating cat-states in microwave cavities. We determine the time of formation and the lifetime of a cat-state in terms of three dimensionless parameters , and . These relate to the driving strength, the parametric nonlinearity, and the Kerr nonlinearity,…
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