Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: May, Alexandre S., Sutevski, Leo, Solard, Jeanne, Cardoso, Gil, Carde, Léon, Pallegoix, Louis, Lescanne, Raphael, Vion, Denis, Bertet, Patrice, Flurin, Emmanuel
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.14804
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866912266553655296
author May, Alexandre S.
Sutevski, Leo
Solard, Jeanne
Cardoso, Gil
Carde, Léon
Pallegoix, Louis
Lescanne, Raphael
Vion, Denis
Bertet, Patrice
Flurin, Emmanuel
author_facet May, Alexandre S.
Sutevski, Leo
Solard, Jeanne
Cardoso, Gil
Carde, Léon
Pallegoix, Louis
Lescanne, Raphael
Vion, Denis
Bertet, Patrice
Flurin, Emmanuel
contents While single-photon counting is routinely achieved in the optical domain, operational single microwave photon detectors (SMPDs) have only recently been demonstrated. SMPDs are critical for sensing weak signals from incoherent emitters, with applications ranging from the detection of individual electron spins and dark-matter candidates to advancements in hybrid quantum devices and superconducting quantum computing. These detectors offer a substantial advantage over quantum-limited amplification schemes by bypassing the standard quantum limit for power detection, therefore further reductions in their intrinsic noise are essential for advancing quantum sensing at microwave frequencies. Several SMPD designs utilize the state of a superconducting qubit to encode the detection of an itinerant photon, and rely on a non-destructive photon-qubit interaction. Here, we leverage this Quantum-Non-Demolition feature by repeatedly measuring the impinging photon with cascaded Four-Wave-Mixing processes and encoding the detection on several qubits. This cascaded detector mitigates the intrinsic local noise of individual qubits, achieving a two-order-of-magnitude reduction in intrinsic detector noise at the cost of halving the efficiency. We report an intrinsic sensitivity of $8(1)\times10^{-24}\text{W}/\sqrt{\text{Hz}}$, with an operational sensitivity of $5.9(6)\times 10^{-23}\text{W}/\sqrt{\text{Hz}}$ limited by thermal photons in the input line.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2502_14804
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Noise Mitigation in Single Microwave Photon Counting by Cascaded Quantum Measurements
May, Alexandre S.
Sutevski, Leo
Solard, Jeanne
Cardoso, Gil
Carde, Léon
Pallegoix, Louis
Lescanne, Raphael
Vion, Denis
Bertet, Patrice
Flurin, Emmanuel
Quantum Physics
While single-photon counting is routinely achieved in the optical domain, operational single microwave photon detectors (SMPDs) have only recently been demonstrated. SMPDs are critical for sensing weak signals from incoherent emitters, with applications ranging from the detection of individual electron spins and dark-matter candidates to advancements in hybrid quantum devices and superconducting quantum computing. These detectors offer a substantial advantage over quantum-limited amplification schemes by bypassing the standard quantum limit for power detection, therefore further reductions in their intrinsic noise are essential for advancing quantum sensing at microwave frequencies. Several SMPD designs utilize the state of a superconducting qubit to encode the detection of an itinerant photon, and rely on a non-destructive photon-qubit interaction. Here, we leverage this Quantum-Non-Demolition feature by repeatedly measuring the impinging photon with cascaded Four-Wave-Mixing processes and encoding the detection on several qubits. This cascaded detector mitigates the intrinsic local noise of individual qubits, achieving a two-order-of-magnitude reduction in intrinsic detector noise at the cost of halving the efficiency. We report an intrinsic sensitivity of $8(1)\times10^{-24}\text{W}/\sqrt{\text{Hz}}$, with an operational sensitivity of $5.9(6)\times 10^{-23}\text{W}/\sqrt{\text{Hz}}$ limited by thermal photons in the input line.
title Noise Mitigation in Single Microwave Photon Counting by Cascaded Quantum Measurements
topic Quantum Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.14804