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      Microwave photonics with superconducting quantum circuits

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          Abstract

          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. This emerging field of superconducting quantum microwave circuits has been driven by many new interesting phenomena in microwave photonics and quantum information processing. For instance, the interaction between superconducting quantum circuits and single microwave photons can reach the regimes of strong, ultra-strong, and even deep-strong coupling. Many higher-order effects, unusual and less familiar in traditional cavity quantum electrodynamics with natural atoms, have been experimentally observed, e.g., giant Kerr effects, multi-photon processes, and single-atom induced bistability of microwave photons. These developments may lead to improved understanding of the counterintuitive properties of quantum mechanics, and speed up applications ranging from microwave photonics to superconducting quantum information processing. In this article, we review experimental and theoretical progress in microwave photonics with superconducting quantum circuits. We hope that this global review can provide a useful roadmap for this rapidly developing field.

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          Most cited references219

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          Quantum state transfer and entanglement distribution among distant nodes in a quantum network

          We propose a scheme to utilize photons for ideal quantum transmission between atoms located at spatially-separated nodes of a quantum network. The transmission protocol employs special laser pulses which excite an atom inside an optical cavity at the sending node so that its state is mapped into a time-symmetric photon wavepacket that will enter a cavity at the receiving node and be absorbed by an atom there with unit probability. Implementation of our scheme would enable reliable transfer or sharing of entanglement among spatially distant atoms.
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            Generating quantum mechanical superpositions of macroscopically distinguishable states via amplitude dispersion

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              Violation of Bell's inequality under strict Einstein locality conditions

              We observe strong violation of Bell's inequality in an Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen type experiment with independent observers. Our experiment definitely implements the ideas behind the well known work by Aspect et al. We for the first time fully enforce the condition of locality, a central assumption in the derivation of Bell's theorem. The necessary space-like separation of the observations is achieved by sufficient physical distance between the measurement stations, by ultra-fast and random setting of the analyzers, and by completely independent data registration.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                2017-07-07
                Article
                1707.02046
                2f0d86ae-b431-4987-83af-dd00a19abfeb

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                Review article, 166 pages (main text 100 pages), 35 figures, 5 tables, 1330 references
                quant-ph cond-mat.mes-hall physics.optics

                Quantum physics & Field theory,Optical materials & Optics,Nanophysics
                Quantum physics & Field theory, Optical materials & Optics, Nanophysics

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