Ultra-High-Precision Detection of Single Microwave Photons based on a Hybrid System between Majorana Zero Mode and a Quantum Dot
Eric Chatterjee, Wei Pan, and Daniel Soh

TL;DR
This paper proposes a hybrid quantum system combining Majorana zero modes and quantum dots for ultra-high-precision detection of single microwave photons, achieving over 99.9% absorption probability and unprecedented photon-number resolution.
Contribution
It introduces a novel hybrid system enabling deterministic microwave photon detection with extremely high efficiency and resolution, surpassing existing hybrid systems.
Findings
Photon absorption probability exceeds 99.9%
Temperature increase in the millikelvin range
Resistance increase in the kiloohm range
Abstract
The ability to detect single photons has become increasingly essential due to the rise of photon-based quantum computing. In this theoretical work, we propose a system consisting of a quantum dot (QD) side-coupled to a superconducting nanowire. The coupling opens a gap in both the QD mode and the Majorana zero mode (MZM) at the nanowire edge, enabling photon absorption in the system. We show that the absorbed photoelectron decays via rapid (sub-nanosecond to nanosecond) nonradiative heat transfer to the nanowire phonon modes rather than by spontaneous emission. Furthermore, we calculate the temperature increase and associated resistance increase induced by the absorption of a photon for a given appropriate set of material and environmental parameters, yielding a temperature increase in the millikelvin range and a resistance increase in the kiloohm range, vastly exceeding the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Quantum optics and atomic interactions
