4.8 Article

Coherent suppression of electromagnetic dissipation due to superconducting quasiparticles

Journal

NATURE
Volume 508, Issue 7496, Pages 369-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature13017

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. YINQE
  2. NSF MRSEC DMR [1119826]
  3. IARPA [W911NF-09-1-0369]
  4. ARO [W911NF-09-1-0514]
  5. NSF [DMR-1006060, DMR-0653377]
  6. DOE [DE-FG02-08ER46482]
  7. EU under REA [CIG-618258]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Owing to the low-loss propagation of electromagnetic signals in superconductors, Josephson junctions constitute ideal building blocks for quantum memories, amplifiers, detectors and high-speed processing units, operating over a wide band of microwave frequencies. Nevertheless, although transport in superconducting wires is perfectly lossless for direct current, transport of radio-frequency signals can be dissipative in the presence of quasiparticle excitations above the superconducting gap(1). Moreover, the exact mechanism of this dissipation in Josephson junctions has never been fully resolved experimentally. In particular, Josephson's key theoretical prediction that quasiparticle dissipation should vanish in transport through a junction when the phase difference across the junction is pi ( ref. 2) has never been observed(3). This subtle effect can be understood as resulting from the destructive interference of two separate dissipative channels involving electron-like and hole-like quasiparticles. Here we report the experimental observation of this quantum coherent suppression of quasiparticle dissipation across a Josephson junction. As the average phase bias across the junction is swept through p, we measure an increase of more than one order of magnitude in the energy relaxation time of a superconducting artificial atom. This striking suppression of dissipation, despite the presence of lossy quasiparticle excitations above the superconducting gap, provides a powerful tool for minimizing decoherence in quantum electronic systems and could be directly exploited in quantum information experiments with superconducting quantum bits.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available