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    Rights statement: Copyright 2021 American Institute of Physics. The following article appeared in AVS Quantum Science, 3, 2021and may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1116/5.0073626 This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics.

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Can the displacemon device test objective collapse models?

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Can the displacemon device test objective collapse models? / Kanari-Naish, Lydia A.; Clarke, Jack; Vanner, Michael R. et al.
In: AVS Quantum Science, Vol. 3, 045603, 22.12.2021.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Kanari-Naish, LA, Clarke, J, Vanner, MR & Laird, E 2021, 'Can the displacemon device test objective collapse models?', AVS Quantum Science, vol. 3, 045603. https://doi.org/10.1116/5.0073626

APA

Kanari-Naish, L. A., Clarke, J., Vanner, M. R., & Laird, E. (2021). Can the displacemon device test objective collapse models? AVS Quantum Science, 3, Article 045603. https://doi.org/10.1116/5.0073626

Vancouver

Kanari-Naish LA, Clarke J, Vanner MR, Laird E. Can the displacemon device test objective collapse models? AVS Quantum Science. 2021 Dec 22;3:045603. doi: 10.1116/5.0073626

Author

Kanari-Naish, Lydia A. ; Clarke, Jack ; Vanner, Michael R. et al. / Can the displacemon device test objective collapse models?. In: AVS Quantum Science. 2021 ; Vol. 3.

Bibtex

@article{85ae9a65b990490e8371d6fd3b592d91,
title = "Can the displacemon device test objective collapse models?",
abstract = "Testing the limits of the applicability of quantum mechanics will deepen our understanding of the universe and may shed light on the interplay between quantum mechanics and gravity. At present there is a wide range of approaches for such macroscopic tests spanning from matter-wave interferometry of large molecules to precision measurements of heating rates in the motion of micro-scale cantilevers. The “displacemon” is a proposed electromechanical device consisting of a mechanical resonator flux-coupled to a superconducting qubit enabling generation and readout of mechanical quantum states. In the original proposal, the mechanical resonator was a carbon nanotube, containing 106 nucleons. Here, in order to probe quantum mechanics at a more macroscopic scale, we propose using an aluminum mechanical resonator on two larger mass scales, one inspired by the Marshall–Simon–Penrose–Bouwmeester moving-mirror proposal, and one set by the Planck mass. For such a device, we examine the experimental requirements needed to perform a more macroscopic quantum test and thus feasibly detect the decoherence effects predicted by two objective collapse models: Di{\'o}si–Penrose and continuous spontaneous localization. Our protocol for testing these two theories takes advantage of the displacemon architecture to create non-Gaussian mechanical states out of equilibrium with their environment and then analyzes the measurement statistics of a superconducting qubit. We find that with improvements to the fabrication and vibration sensitivities of these electromechanical devices, the displacemon device provides a new route to feasibly test decoherence mechanisms beyond standard quantum theory.",
author = "Kanari-Naish, {Lydia A.} and Jack Clarke and Vanner, {Michael R.} and Edward Laird",
note = "Copyright 2021 American Institute of Physics. The following article appeared in AVS Quantum Science, 3, 2021and may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1116/5.0073626 This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics. ",
year = "2021",
month = dec,
day = "22",
doi = "10.1116/5.0073626",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
journal = "AVS Quantum Science",
publisher = "American Institute of Physics",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Can the displacemon device test objective collapse models?

AU - Kanari-Naish, Lydia A.

AU - Clarke, Jack

AU - Vanner, Michael R.

AU - Laird, Edward

N1 - Copyright 2021 American Institute of Physics. The following article appeared in AVS Quantum Science, 3, 2021and may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1116/5.0073626 This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics.

PY - 2021/12/22

Y1 - 2021/12/22

N2 - Testing the limits of the applicability of quantum mechanics will deepen our understanding of the universe and may shed light on the interplay between quantum mechanics and gravity. At present there is a wide range of approaches for such macroscopic tests spanning from matter-wave interferometry of large molecules to precision measurements of heating rates in the motion of micro-scale cantilevers. The “displacemon” is a proposed electromechanical device consisting of a mechanical resonator flux-coupled to a superconducting qubit enabling generation and readout of mechanical quantum states. In the original proposal, the mechanical resonator was a carbon nanotube, containing 106 nucleons. Here, in order to probe quantum mechanics at a more macroscopic scale, we propose using an aluminum mechanical resonator on two larger mass scales, one inspired by the Marshall–Simon–Penrose–Bouwmeester moving-mirror proposal, and one set by the Planck mass. For such a device, we examine the experimental requirements needed to perform a more macroscopic quantum test and thus feasibly detect the decoherence effects predicted by two objective collapse models: Diósi–Penrose and continuous spontaneous localization. Our protocol for testing these two theories takes advantage of the displacemon architecture to create non-Gaussian mechanical states out of equilibrium with their environment and then analyzes the measurement statistics of a superconducting qubit. We find that with improvements to the fabrication and vibration sensitivities of these electromechanical devices, the displacemon device provides a new route to feasibly test decoherence mechanisms beyond standard quantum theory.

AB - Testing the limits of the applicability of quantum mechanics will deepen our understanding of the universe and may shed light on the interplay between quantum mechanics and gravity. At present there is a wide range of approaches for such macroscopic tests spanning from matter-wave interferometry of large molecules to precision measurements of heating rates in the motion of micro-scale cantilevers. The “displacemon” is a proposed electromechanical device consisting of a mechanical resonator flux-coupled to a superconducting qubit enabling generation and readout of mechanical quantum states. In the original proposal, the mechanical resonator was a carbon nanotube, containing 106 nucleons. Here, in order to probe quantum mechanics at a more macroscopic scale, we propose using an aluminum mechanical resonator on two larger mass scales, one inspired by the Marshall–Simon–Penrose–Bouwmeester moving-mirror proposal, and one set by the Planck mass. For such a device, we examine the experimental requirements needed to perform a more macroscopic quantum test and thus feasibly detect the decoherence effects predicted by two objective collapse models: Diósi–Penrose and continuous spontaneous localization. Our protocol for testing these two theories takes advantage of the displacemon architecture to create non-Gaussian mechanical states out of equilibrium with their environment and then analyzes the measurement statistics of a superconducting qubit. We find that with improvements to the fabrication and vibration sensitivities of these electromechanical devices, the displacemon device provides a new route to feasibly test decoherence mechanisms beyond standard quantum theory.

U2 - 10.1116/5.0073626

DO - 10.1116/5.0073626

M3 - Journal article

VL - 3

JO - AVS Quantum Science

JF - AVS Quantum Science

M1 - 045603

ER -