Taming the Rotating Wave Approximation
Daniel Burgarth, Paolo Facchi, Robin Hillier, Marilena Ligab\`o

TL;DR
This paper rigorously analyzes the validity of the Rotating Wave Approximation in quantum light-matter interactions, providing bounds that depend on coupling strength, photon number, and experimental parameters, crucial for scalable quantum technology.
Contribution
It develops non-perturbative bounds on the RWA's accuracy, incorporating photon number dependence, to inform experimental regimes where the approximation remains valid for quantum computing.
Findings
Bounds depend on coupling strength and photon number.
Experimental regimes with hundreds of photons are affected by RWA errors.
Results inform the design of quantum experiments and error correction.
Abstract
The interaction between light and matter is one of the oldest research areas of quantum mechanics, and a field that just keeps on delivering new insights and applications. With the arrival of cavity and circuit quantum electrodynamics we can now achieve strong light-matter couplings which form the basis of most implementations of quantum technology. But quantum information processing also has high demands requiring total error rates of fractions of percentage in order to be scalable (fault-tolerant) to useful applications. Since errors can also arise from modelling, this has brought into center stage one of the key approximations of quantum theory, the Rotating Wave Approximation (RWA) of the quantum Rabi model, leading to the Jaynes-Cummings Hamiltonian. While the RWA is often very good and incredibly useful to understand light-matter interactions, there is also growing experimental…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Research and Discoveries · Geophysics and Sensor Technology
