Magnetically induced transparency of a quantum metamaterial composed of twin flux qubits

Abstract

Quantum theory is expected to govern the electromagnetic properties of a quantum metamaterial, an artificially fabricated medium composed of many quantum objects acting as artificial atoms. Propagation of electromagnetic waves through such a medium is accompanied by excitations of intrinsic quantum transitions within individual meta-atoms and modes corresponding to the interactions between them. Here we demonstrate an experiment in which an array of double-loop type superconducting flux qubits is embedded into a microwave transmission line. We observe that in a broad frequency range the transmission coefficient through the metamaterial periodically depends on externally applied magnetic field. Field-controlled switching of the ground state of the meta-atoms induces a large suppression of the transmission. Moreover, the excitation of meta-atoms in the array leads to a large resonant enhancement of the transmission. We anticipate possible applications of the observed frequency-tunable transparency in superconducting quantum networks.

Description
Keywords
Quantum theory, metamaterial, artificial atoms
Citation
Shulga, K., Il’ichev, E., Fistul, M. V., Besedin, I. S., Butz, S., Astafiev, O., et al. (2018). Magnetically induced transparency of a quantum metamaterial composed of twin flux qubits. 9. https://doi.org//10.1038/s41467-017-02608-8
License
CC BY 4.0 Unported