A team of researchers from Université Paris-Saclay, the University of Ulm and the Institute of Quantum Technologies has developed an on-chip circuit that produces up to six microwave photons at the same time.
The circuit was designed using a Josephson junction, a coil inductor and a capacitor placed on a chip-sized base. A Josephson junction is a device with two strips of superconductors placed on a base plate a short distance apart. An insulating barrier is then set between them. Applying voltage to one of the strips pushes the voltage through the insulator, where Cooper pairs of electrons are created. These tunnel through the barrier, and the amount of energy they have is dependent on the amount of voltage applied.
In the new circuit, the coil inductor and the capacitor were tuned so that they would resonate at microwave frequencies, and the number of photons emitted by the device was dependent on the voltage applied. The device is capable of producing six photons at the same time. The researchers did not test the photons to determine if they were entangled, but believe they were based on prior experiments they had conducted. They also did not attempt to modify the device to determine if more than six photons could be produced. More testing is required, but if the device works as hoped, it could signal the start of a new wave of research based on groups of entangled particles. (Phyx.org)
The paper has been published in the journal Physical Review X.