Resolving photon number states in a superconducting circuit
D. I. Schuster, A. A. Houck, J. A. Schreier, A. Wallraff, J. M., Gambetta, A. Blais, L. Frunzio, B. Johnson, M. H. Devoret, S. M. Girvin, and, R. J. Schoelkopf

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a superconducting circuit that can resolve individual photon number states in a microwave field without photon absorption, enabling advanced quantum state control and measurement.
Contribution
It reports the first experimental realization of the strong dispersive regime in circuit QED, allowing photon number resolution without photon absorption.
Findings
Resolved spectral lines for each photon number state
Distinguished between coherent and thermal fields
Potential for non-classical state generation and quantum logic
Abstract
Electromagnetic signals are always composed of photons, though in the circuit domain those signals are carried as voltages and currents on wires, and the discreteness of the photon's energy is usually not evident. However, by coupling a superconducting qubit to signals on a microwave transmission line, it is possible to construct an integrated circuit where the presence or absence of even a single photon can have a dramatic effect. This system is called circuit quantum electrodynamics (QED) because it is the circuit equivalent of the atom-photon interaction in cavity QED. Previously, circuit QED devices were shown to reach the resonant strong coupling regime, where a single qubit can absorb and re-emit a single photon many times. Here, we report a circuit QED experiment which achieves the strong dispersive limit, a new regime of cavity QED in which a single photon has a large effect on…
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