Quantum squeezing in a nonlinear mechanical oscillator

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Abstract

Mechanical degrees of freedom are natural candidates for continuous-variable quantum information processing and bosonic quantum simulations. However, these applications require the engineering of squeezing and nonlinearities in the quantum regime. Here we demonstrate squeezing below the zero-point fluctuations of a gigahertz-frequency mechanical resonator coupled to a superconducting qubit. This is achieved by parametrically driving the qubit, which results in an effective two-phonon drive. In addition, we show that the resonator mode inherits a nonlinearity from the off-resonant coupling with the qubit, which can be tuned by controlling the detuning. We, thus, realize a mechanical squeezed Kerr oscillator, in which we demonstrate the preparation of non-Gaussian quantum states of motion with Wigner function negativities and high quantum Fisher information. This shows that our results can also have applications in quantum metrology and sensing.

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Marti, S., von Lüpke, U., Joshi, O., Yang, Y., Bild, M., Omahen, A., … Fadel, M. (2024). Quantum squeezing in a nonlinear mechanical oscillator. Nature Physics, 20(9), 1448–1453. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41567-024-02545-6

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