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The reconfigurable Josephson circulator/directional amplifier

TLDR
In this paper, the authors proposed to use a three-wave Josephson-junction-based superconducting microwave circuit with phase-preserving directional amplifier and circulator.
Abstract
Circulators and directional amplifiers are crucial non-reciprocal signal routing and processing components involved in microwave readout chains for a variety of applications. They are particularly important in the field of superconducting quantum information, where the devices also need to have minimal photon losses to preserve the quantum coherence of signals. Conventional commercial implementations of each device suffer from losses and are built from very different physical principles, which has led to separate strategies for the construction of their quantum-limited versions. However, as recently proposed theoretically, by establishing simultaneous pairwise conversion and/or gain processes between three modes of a Josephson-junction based superconducting microwave circuit, it is possible to endow the circuit with the functions of either a phase-preserving directional amplifier or a circulator. Here, we experimentally demonstrate these two modes of operation of the same circuit. Furthermore, in the directional amplifier mode, we show that the noise performance is comparable to standard non-directional superconducting amplifiers, while in the circulator mode, we show that the sense of circulation is fully reversible. Our device is far simpler in both modes of operation than previous proposals and implementations, requiring only three microwave pumps. It offers the advantage of flexibility, as it can dynamically switch between modes of operation as its pump conditions are changed. Moreover, by demonstrating that a single three-wave process yields non-reciprocal devices with reconfigurable functions, our work breaks the ground for the development of future, more-complex directional circuits, and has excellent prospects for on-chip integration.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Microwave photonics with superconducting quantum circuits

TL;DR: In the past 20 years, impressive progress has been made both experimentally and theoretically in superconducting quantum circuits, which provide a platform for manipulating microwave photons as mentioned in this paper, and many higher-order effects, unusual and less familiar in traditional cavity quantum electrodynamics with natural atoms, have been experimentally observed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Non-reciprocal photonics based on time modulation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review recent progress and opportunities offered by temporal modulation to break reciprocity, revealing its potential for compact, low-energy, integrated non-reciprocal devices and discuss the future of this exciting research field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Generalized non-reciprocity in an optomechanical circuit via synthetic magnetism and reservoir engineering

TL;DR: In this article, a silicon optomechanical circuit with both optical and mechanical connectivity between two optical cavities was designed and fabricated to enable non-reciprocal transport of photons with 35 dB isolation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nonreciprocity and magnetic-free isolation based on optomechanical interactions

TL;DR: This work uses optomechanical interactions to strongly break reciprocity in a compact system, and shows that nonreciprocal transmission is preserved for nondegenerate modes, and demonstrates nonReciprocal parametric amplification.
References
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Journal Article

Microwave engineering

R. Kaul
- 01 May 1989 - 
TL;DR: A brief history of microwave engineering is given in this paper, where the impact of computer-aided design and monolithic microwave integrated circuits on microwave design is examined, along with suggestions for related studies that would be useful to the microwave engineer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Superconducting circuits for quantum information: an outlook.

TL;DR: For the first time, physicists will have to master quantum error correction to design and operate complex active systems that are dissipative in nature, yet remain coherent indefinitely.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sideband cooling of micromechanical motion to the quantum ground state

TL;DR: Sideband cooling of an approximately 10-MHz micromechanical oscillator to the quantum ground state is demonstrated and the device exhibits strong coupling, allowing coherent exchange of microwave photons and mechanical phonons.
Journal ArticleDOI

Superconducting quantum bits

TL;DR: Superconducting quantum bits (qubits) form the key component of these circuits and their quantum state is manipulated by using electromagnetic pulses to control the magnetic flux, the electric charge or the phase difference across a Josephson junction.
Journal ArticleDOI

A broadband superconducting detector suitable for use in large arrays

TL;DR: The demonstration of a superconducting detector that is easily fabricated and can readily be incorporated into large arrays, and its sensitivity is already within an order of magnitude of that needed for CMB observations, and the energy resolution is similarly close to the targets required for future X-ray astronomy missions.
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