Photon Frequency Conversion in High-$Q$ Superconducting Resonators: Axion Electrodynamics, QED & Nonlinear Meissner Radiation
Hikaru Ueki, J. A. Sauls

TL;DR
This paper investigates photon frequency conversion in high-Q superconducting resonators, focusing on Meissner currents and their role in axion and QED light-by-light scattering detection, highlighting the potential and limitations of various cavity configurations.
Contribution
It analyzes the dominance of Meissner current-induced frequency conversion over EH interactions in certain high-Q cavities and proposes dual cavity setups to suppress background noise for axion detection.
Findings
Meissner currents dominate photon conversion in cavities with Q ≤ 10^{12}
Background photons from Meissner currents limit axion detection in single cavities
Dual cavity setups can suppress backgrounds and enhance detection sensitivity
Abstract
High-Q superconducting resonators have been proposed and developed as detectors of light-by-light scattering mediated by the hypothesized axion or virtual electron-positron pairs in quantum electrodynamics - the Euler-Heisenberg (EH) interaction. Photon frequency and mode conversion is central to the scheme for detecting such rare events. Superconducting resonators are nonlinear devices. The Meissner screening currents that confine the electromagnetic fields to the vacuum region of a superconducting RF cavity are nonlinear functions of the EM field at the vacuum-superconducting interface, and as a result can generate source currents and frequency conversion of microwave photons in the cavity. In this report we consider photon frequency and mode conversion in superconducting resonators with high quality factors from Meissner currents in single and dual cavity setups proposed for axion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Quantum Information and Cryptography
