Quantum Optics with Giant Artificial Atoms

Johannes Knörzer
ETH Zürich, Switzerland

Superconducting circuits coupled to acoustic waveguides have extended the range of phenomena that can be experimentally studied using tools from quantum optics. In particular giant artificial atoms permit the investigation of systems in which the electric dipole approximation breaks down and pronounced non-Markovian effects become important. While previous studies of giant atoms focused on the realm of the rotating-wave approximation, in [1] we go beyond this and perform a numerically exact analysis of giant atoms strongly coupled to their environment, in regimes where counterrotating terms cannot be neglected. To achieve this, we use a Lanczos transformation to cast the field Hamiltonian into the form of a one-dimensional chain and employ matrix-product state simulations. This approach yields access to a wide range of system-bath observables and to previously unexplored parameter regimes, and is of independent interest for the simulation of strongly coupled systems.

[1] D. Noachtar, J. Knörzer, and R. H. Jonsson, Non-perturbative treatment of giant atoms using chain transformations, arXiv:2201.11544

JavaScript has been disabled in your browser