Theoretical Analysis of Photonic Resonances in Spectroscopic Measurements of a Kerr Nonlinear Resonator
Yuki Tanaka, Aiko Yamaguchi, Tomohiro Yamaji, Yuta Shingu, Keisuke Matsumoto, Tsuyoshi Yamamoto, and Yuichiro Matsuzaki

TL;DR
This paper provides a theoretical and experimental analysis of photonic resonance in Kerr nonlinear resonators, revealing higher-order effects and decoherence as key factors in the resonance mechanism.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed explanation of photonic resonance origin in KPO spectroscopy, combining theoretical calculations, experiments, and analytical insights.
Findings
PR observed in both theory and experiment
Higher-order perturbations induce Rabi oscillations
Decoherence causes decay of coherent oscillations
Abstract
The Kerr parametric oscillator (KPO) has recently attracted considerable attention from the perspective of its applications to quantum information processing, and understanding its properties is an important challenge. Spectroscopic measurements serve as an effective means of elucidating detailed information about the system, such as the energy-level structure and the transition matrix elements of the KPO. Conventional spectroscopy requires the drive frequency to match an energy spacing with a nonzero transition matrix element. In recent years, a phenomenon called photonic resonance (PR) has been theoretically predicted in KPO spectroscopy. Specifically, resonance occurs under the condition that the detuning is set to times the Kerr nonlinearity, where is a natural number. However, under this condition the transition matrix element vanishes, and thus the mechanism by which…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStrong Light-Matter Interactions · Quantum optics and atomic interactions · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
