Controllable microwave three-wave mixing via a single three-level superconducting quantum circuit

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Abstract

Three-wave mixing in second-order nonlinear optical processes cannot occur in atomic systems due to the electric-dipole selection rules. In contrast, we demonstrate that second-order nonlinear processes can occur in a superconducting quantum circuit (i.e., a superconducting artificial atom) when the inversion symmetry of the potential energy is broken by simply changing the applied magnetic flux. In particular, we show that difference- and sum-frequencies (and second harmonics) can be generated in the microwave regime in a controllable manner by using a single three-level superconducting flux quantum circuit (SFQC). For our proposed parameters, the frequency tunability of this circuit can be achieved in the range of about 17 GHz for the sum-frequency generation, and around 42 GHz (or 26 GHz) for the difference-frequency generation. Our proposal provides a simple method to generate second-order nonlinear processes within current experimental parameters of SFQCs.

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Liu, Y. X., Sun, H. C., Peng, Z. H., Miranowicz, A., Tsai, J. S., & Nori, F. (2014). Controllable microwave three-wave mixing via a single three-level superconducting quantum circuit. Scientific Reports, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep07289

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