4.6 Article

A qubit strongly coupled to a resonant cavity: asymmetry of the spontaneous emission spectrum beyond the rotating wave approximation

Journal

NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1367-2630/13/7/073002

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DARPA
  2. AFOSR
  3. Laboratory of Physical Sciences
  4. National Security Agency
  5. Army Research Office
  6. National Science Foundation [0726909]
  7. JSPS-RFBR [09-02-92114]
  8. MEXT
  9. National Natural Science Foundation of China [10625416, 10904126]
  10. National Basic Research Program of China [2009CB929300]
  11. ISTCP [2008DFA01930]
  12. Fujian Province Natural Science Foundation [2009J05014]
  13. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [22224007, 21102002] Funding Source: KAKEN

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We investigate the spontaneous emission (SE) spectrum of a qubit in a lossy resonant cavity. We use neither the rotating-wave approximation nor the Markov approximation. For the weak-coupling case, the SE spectrum of the qubit is a single peak, with its location depending on the spectral density of the qubit environment. Then, the asymmetry (of the location and heights of the two peaks) of the two SE peaks (which are related to the vacuum Rabi splitting) changes as the qubit-cavity coupling increases. Explicitly, for a qubit in a low-frequency intrinsic bath, the height asymmetry of the splitting peaks is enhanced as the qubit-cavity coupling strength increases. However, for a qubit in an Ohmic bath, the height asymmetry of the spectral peaks is inverted compared to the low-frequency bath case. With further increasing the qubit-cavity coupling to the ultra-strong regime, the height asymmetry of the left and right peaks is slightly inverted, which is consistent with the corresponding case of a low-frequency bath. This inversion of the asymmetry arises from the competition between the Ohmic bath and the cavity bath. Therefore, after considering the anti-rotating terms, our results explicitly show how the height asymmetry in the SE spectrum peaks depends on the qubit-cavity coupling and the type of intrinsic noise experienced by the qubit.

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