Anharmonic oscillators, such as the pendulum, are widely 1 used for precision measurement and to model nonlinear phenomena 2 . Fluctuations such as thermal or quantum mechanical noise can excite random motion in the oscillator, ultimately imposing a bound on measurement sensitivity. In systems where equilibrium is established with the environment, noise-induced broadening scales with the intensity of fluctuations. But how does noise affect an out-of-equilibrium oscillator where the motion is varied faster than energy is exchanged with the environment? We create such a scenario by applying fast, frequency-chirped voltage pulses to a nonlinear superconducting resonator where the ring-down time is longer than the pulse duration. Under these conditions, the circuit oscillates with either small or large amplitude depending on whether the drive voltage is below or above a critical value 3 . This phenomenon, known as autoresonance, is significant in planetary dynamics 4 and plasmas 5 , enables the excitation of particles in cyclotron accelerators 6 and may even be used to detect the state of a quantum two-level system 7 . Our results show that the amplitude of fluctuations determines the initial conditions of such a non-equilibrium oscillator and does not affect its time evolution. © 2011 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Murch, K. W., Vijay, R., Barth, I., Naaman, O., Aumentado, J., Friedland, L., & Siddiqi, I. (2011). Quantum fluctuations in the chirped pendulum. Nature Physics, 7(2), 105–108. https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys1867
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