Measurement of quantum noise in a single-electron transistor near the quantum limit

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Abstract

Quantum measurement has challenged physicists for almost a century. Classically, there is no lower bound on the noise a measurement may add. Quantum mechanically, however, measuring a system necessarily perturbs it. When applied to electrical amplifiers, this means that improved sensitivity requires increased backaction that itself contributes noise. The result is a strict quantum limit on added amplifier noise. To approach this limit, a quantum-limited amplifier must possess an ideal balance between sensitivity and backaction; furthermore, its noise must dominate that of subsequent classical amplifiers. Here, we report the first complete and quantitative measurement of the quantum noise of a superconducting single-electron transistor (S-SET) near a double Cooper-pair resonance predicted to have the right combination of sensitivity and backaction. A simultaneous measurement of our S-SETs charge sensitivity indicates that it operates within a factor of 3.6 of the quantum limit, a fourfold improvement over the nearest comparable results. © 2009 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

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Xue, W. W., Ji, Z., Pan, F., Stettenheim, J., Blencowe, M. P., & Rimberg, A. J. (2009). Measurement of quantum noise in a single-electron transistor near the quantum limit. Nature Physics, 5(9), 660–664. https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys1339

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