@article{19073,
  abstract     = {The rapid development of superconducting quantum hardware is expected to run into substantial restrictions on scalability because error correction in a cryogenic environment has stringent input–output requirements. Classical data centres rely on fibre-optic interconnects to remove similar networking bottlenecks. In the same spirit, ultracold electro-optic links have been proposed and used to generate qubit control signals, or to replace cryogenic readout electronics. So far, these approaches have suffered from either low efficiency, low bandwidth or additional noise. Here we realize radio-over-fibre qubit readout at millikelvin temperatures. We use one device to simultaneously perform upconversion and downconversion between microwave and optical frequencies and so do not require any active or passive cryogenic microwave equipment. We demonstrate all-optical single-shot readout in a circulator-free readout scheme. Importantly, we do not observe any direct radiation impact on the qubit state, despite the absence of shielding elements. This compatibility between superconducting circuits and telecom-wavelength light is not only a prerequisite to establish modular quantum networks, but it is also relevant for multiplexed readout of superconducting photon detectors and classical superconducting logic.},
  author       = {Arnold, Georg M and Werner, Thomas and Sahu, Rishabh and Kapoor, Lucky and Qiu, Liu and Fink, Johannes M},
  issn         = {1745-2481},
  journal      = {Nature Physics},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{All-optical superconducting qubit readout}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41567-024-02741-4},
  volume       = {21},
  year         = {2025},
}

@article{19280,
  abstract     = {Recent advancements in superconducting circuits have enabled the experimental study of collective behavior of precisely controlled intermediate-scale ensembles of qubits. In this work, we demonstrate an atomic frequency comb formed by individual artificial atoms strongly coupled to a single resonator mode. We observe periodic microwave pulses that originate from a single coherent excitation dynamically interacting with the multiqubit ensemble. We show that this revival dynamics emerges as a consequence of the constructive and periodic rephasing of the five superconducting qubits forming the vacuum Rabi split comb. In the future, similar devices could be used as a memory with in situ tunable storage time or as an on-chip periodic pulse generator with nonclassical photon statistics.},
  author       = {Redchenko, Elena and Zens, M. and Zemlicka, Martin and Peruzzo, Matilda and Hassani, Farid and Sett, Riya and Zielinski, Przemyslaw D and Dhar, H. S. and Krimer, D. O. and Rotter, S. and Fink, Johannes M},
  issn         = {1079-7114},
  journal      = {Physical Review Letters},
  number       = {6},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Observation of collapse and revival in a superconducting atomic frequency comb}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.134.063601},
  volume       = {134},
  year         = {2025},
}

@article{17202,
  abstract     = {Gate-tunable transmons (gatemons) employing semiconductor Josephson junctions have recently emerged as building blocks for hybrid quantum circuits. In this study, we present a gatemon fabricated in planar Germanium. We induce superconductivity in a two-dimensional hole gas by evaporating aluminum atop a thin spacer, which separates the superconductor from the Ge quantum well. The Josephson junction is then integrated into an Xmon circuit and capacitively coupled to a transmission line resonator. We showcase the qubit tunability in a broad frequency range with resonator and two-tone spectroscopy. Time-domain characterizations reveal energy relaxation and coherence times up to 75 ns. Our results, combined with the recent advances in the spin qubit field, pave the way towards novel hybrid and protected qubits in a group IV, CMOS-compatible material.},
  author       = {Sagi, Oliver and Crippa, Alessandro and Valentini, Marco and Janik, Marian and Baghumyan, Levon and Fabris, Giorgio and Kapoor, Lucky and Hassani, Farid and Fink, Johannes M and Calcaterra, Stefano and Chrastina, Daniel and Isella, Giovanni and Katsaros, Georgios},
  issn         = {2041-1723},
  journal      = {Nature Communications},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{A gate tunable transmon qubit in planar Ge}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41467-024-50763-6},
  volume       = {15},
  year         = {2024},
}

@article{17183,
  abstract     = {The photon blockade breakdown in a continuously driven cavity QED system has been proposed as a prime example for a first-order driven-dissipative quantum phase transition. However, the predicted scaling from a microscopic behavior—dominated by quantum fluctuations—to a macroscopic one—characterized by stable phases—and the associated exponents and phase diagram have not been observed so far. In this work we couple a single transmon qubit with a fixed coupling strength 𝑔 to a superconducting cavity that is in situ bandwidth 𝜅 tunable to controllably approach this thermodynamic limit. Even though the system remains microscopic, we observe its behavior becoming increasingly macroscopic as a function of 𝑔/𝜅. For the highest realized 𝑔/𝜅 of approximately 287, the system switches with a characteristic timescale as long as 6 s between a bright coherent state with approximately 8×103 intracavity photons and the vacuum state. This exceeds the microscopic timescales by 6 orders of magnitude and approaches the perfect hysteresis expected between two macroscopic attractors in the thermodynamic limit. These findings and interpretation are qualitatively supported by neoclassical theory and large-scale quantum-jump Monte Carlo simulations. Besides shedding more light on driven-dissipative physics in the limit of strong light-matter coupling, this system might also find applications in quantum sensing and metrology.},
  author       = {Sett, Riya and Hassani, Farid and Phan, Duc T and Barzanjeh, Shabir and Vukics, Andras and Fink, Johannes M},
  issn         = {2691-3399},
  journal      = {PRX Quantum},
  number       = {1},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Emergent macroscopic bistability induced by a single superconducting qubit}},
  doi          = {10.1103/prxquantum.5.010327},
  volume       = {5},
  year         = {2024},
}

@misc{18978,
  abstract     = {Data analysis files for the manuscript "Emergent Macroscopic Bistability Induced by a Single Superconducting Qubit".

This contains the raw data and the data analysis files for generating the figures in the manuscript.

 Figure1 file - The raw data of cavity transmission spectra for 6 different kappas are there. They are fitted with input-output theory in the python file.
 Figure2 file - The raw data at 8 MHz kappa are included. all hte figures in figure 2 are generated in the python file
 Figure3 file - The raw data of PBB single shot measurements at all kappas are included. The detailed analysis and the Figure3 generated for the paper are all in the python analysis file. Also, thefiles containing the time-evolution of the intensity from Master Equation solution are included.
Figure4 file - The raw data at 2.6 MHz for different drive detunings and the corresponding analyses are included. And the python file includes the analysis of the experimental data as well as approximate neoclassical equations solutions for 2-level and 3-level transmons are included.  },
  author       = {Sett, Riya and Hassani, Farid and Phan, Duc T and Barzanjeh, Shabir and Vukics, Andras and Fink, Johannes M},
  publisher    = {Zenodo},
  title        = {{Data Analysis files for "Emergent Macroscopic Bistability Induced by a Single Superconducting Qubit"}},
  doi          = {10.5281/ZENODO.10518320},
  year         = {2024},
}

@inproceedings{14872,
  abstract     = {We entangled microwave and optical photons for the first time as verified by a measured two-mode vacuum squeezing of 0.7 dB. This electro-optic entanglement is the key resource needed to connect cryogenic quantum circuits.},
  author       = {Sahu, Rishabh and Qiu, Liu and Hease, William J and Arnold, Georg M and Minoguchi, Yuri and Rabl, Peter and Fink, Johannes M},
  booktitle    = {Frontiers in Optics + Laser Science 2023},
  isbn         = {9781957171296},
  location     = {Tacoma, WA, United States},
  publisher    = {Optica Publishing Group},
  title        = {{Entangling microwaves and telecom wavelength light}},
  doi          = {10.1364/ls.2023.lm1f.3},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{14517,
  abstract     = {State-of-the-art transmon qubits rely on large capacitors, which systematically improve their coherence due to reduced surface-loss participation. However, this approach increases both the footprint and the parasitic cross-coupling and is ultimately limited by radiation losses—a potential roadblock for scaling up quantum processors to millions of qubits. In this work we present transmon qubits with sizes as low as 36 × 39 µm2 with  100-nm-wide vacuum-gap capacitors that are micromachined from commercial silicon-on-insulator wafers and shadow evaporated with aluminum. We achieve a vacuum participation ratio up to 99.6% in an in-plane design that is compatible with standard coplanar circuits. Qubit relaxationtime measurements for small gaps with high zero-point electric field variance of up to 22 V/m reveal a double exponential decay indicating comparably strong qubit interaction with long-lived two-level systems. The exceptionally high selectivity of up to 20 dB to the superconductor-vacuum interface allows us to precisely back out the sub-single-photon dielectric loss tangent of aluminum oxide previously exposed to ambient conditions. In terms of future scaling potential, we achieve a ratio of qubit quality factor to a footprint area equal to 20 µm−2, which is comparable with the highest T1 devices relying on larger geometries, a value that could improve substantially for lower surface-loss superconductors. },
  author       = {Zemlicka, Martin and Redchenko, Elena and Peruzzo, Matilda and Hassani, Farid and Trioni, Andrea and Barzanjeh, Shabir and Fink, Johannes M},
  issn         = {2331-7019},
  journal      = {Physical Review Applied},
  number       = {4},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Compact vacuum-gap transmon qubits: Selective and sensitive probes for superconductor surface losses}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PhysRevApplied.20.044054},
  volume       = {20},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{13106,
  abstract     = {Quantum entanglement is a key resource in currently developed quantum technologies. Sharing this fragile property between superconducting microwave circuits and optical or atomic systems would enable new functionalities, but this has been hindered by an energy scale mismatch of >104 and the resulting mutually imposed loss and noise. In this work, we created and verified entanglement between microwave and optical fields in a millikelvin environment. Using an optically pulsed superconducting electro-optical device, we show entanglement between propagating microwave and optical fields in the continuous variable domain. This achievement not only paves the way for entanglement between superconducting circuits and telecom wavelength light, but also has wide-ranging implications for hybrid quantum networks in the context of modularization, scaling, sensing, and cross-platform verification.},
  author       = {Sahu, Rishabh and Qiu, Liu and Hease, William J and Arnold, Georg M and Minoguchi, Y. and Rabl, P. and Fink, Johannes M},
  issn         = {1095-9203},
  journal      = {Science},
  keywords     = {Multidisciplinary},
  number       = {6646},
  pages        = {718--721},
  publisher    = {American Association for the Advancement of Science},
  title        = {{Entangling microwaves with light}},
  doi          = {10.1126/science.adg3812},
  volume       = {380},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{13227,
  abstract     = {Currently available quantum processors are dominated by noise, which severely limits their applicability and motivates the search for new physical qubit encodings. In this work, we introduce the inductively shunted transmon, a weakly flux-tunable superconducting qubit that offers charge offset protection for all levels and a 20-fold reduction in flux dispersion compared to the state-of-the-art resulting in a constant coherence over a full flux quantum. The parabolic confinement provided by the inductive shunt as well as the linearity of the geometric superinductor facilitates a high-power readout that resolves quantum jumps with a fidelity and QND-ness of >90% and without the need for a Josephson parametric amplifier. Moreover, the device reveals quantum tunneling physics between the two prepared fluxon ground states with a measured average decay time of up to 3.5 h. In the future, fast time-domain control of the transition matrix elements could offer a new path forward to also achieve full qubit control in the decay-protected fluxon basis.},
  author       = {Hassani, Farid and Peruzzo, Matilda and Kapoor, Lucky and Trioni, Andrea and Zemlicka, Martin and Fink, Johannes M},
  issn         = {2041-1723},
  journal      = {Nature Communications},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Inductively shunted transmons exhibit noise insensitive plasmon states and a fluxon decay exceeding 3 hours}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41467-023-39656-2},
  volume       = {14},
  year         = {2023},
}

@misc{13124,
  abstract     = {This dataset comprises all data shown in the figures of the submitted article "Tunable directional photon scattering from a pair of superconducting qubits" at arXiv:2205.03293. Additional raw data are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.},
  author       = {Redchenko, Elena and Poshakinskiy, Alexander and Sett, Riya and Zemlicka, Martin and Poddubny, Alexander and Fink, Johannes M},
  publisher    = {Zenodo},
  title        = {{Tunable directional photon scattering from a pair of superconducting qubits}},
  doi          = {10.5281/ZENODO.7858567},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{14032,
  abstract     = {Arrays of Josephson junctions are governed by a competition between superconductivity and repulsive Coulomb interactions, and are expected to exhibit diverging low-temperature resistance when interactions exceed a critical level. Here we report a study of the transport and microwave response of Josephson arrays with interactions exceeding this level. Contrary to expectations, we observe that the array resistance drops dramatically as the temperature is decreased—reminiscent of superconducting behaviour—and then saturates at low temperature. Applying a magnetic field, we eventually observe a transition to a highly resistive regime. These observations can be understood within a theoretical picture that accounts for the effect of thermal fluctuations on the insulating phase. On the basis of the agreement between experiment and theory, we suggest that apparent superconductivity in our Josephson arrays arises from melting the zero-temperature insulator.},
  author       = {Mukhopadhyay, Soham and Senior, Jorden L and Saez Mollejo, Jaime and Puglia, Denise and Zemlicka, Martin and Fink, Johannes M and Higginbotham, Andrew P},
  issn         = {1745-2481},
  journal      = {Nature Physics},
  keywords     = {General Physics and Astronomy},
  pages        = {1630--1635},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Superconductivity from a melted insulator in Josephson junction arrays}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41567-023-02161-w},
  volume       = {19},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{13200,
  abstract     = {Recent quantum technologies have established precise quantum control of various microscopic systems using electromagnetic waves. Interfaces based on cryogenic cavity electro-optic systems are particularly promising, due to the direct interaction between microwave and optical fields in the quantum regime. Quantum optical control of superconducting microwave circuits has been precluded so far due to the weak electro-optical coupling as well as quasi-particles induced by the pump laser. Here we report the coherent control of a superconducting microwave cavity using laser pulses in a multimode electro-optical device at millikelvin temperature with near-unity cooperativity. Both the stationary and instantaneous responses of the microwave and optical modes comply with the coherent electro-optical interaction, and reveal only minuscule amount of excess back-action with an unanticipated time delay. Our demonstration enables wide ranges of applications beyond quantum transductions, from squeezing and quantum non-demolition measurements of microwave fields, to entanglement generation and hybrid quantum networks.},
  author       = {Qiu, Liu and Sahu, Rishabh and Hease, William J and Arnold, Georg M and Fink, Johannes M},
  issn         = {2041-1723},
  journal      = {Nature Communications},
  publisher    = {Nature Research},
  title        = {{Coherent optical control of a superconducting microwave cavity via electro-optical dynamical back-action}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41467-023-39493-3},
  volume       = {14},
  year         = {2023},
}

@unpublished{18953,
  abstract     = {The rapid development of superconducting quantum hardware is expected to run into significant I/O restrictions due to the need for large-scale error correction in a cryogenic environment. Classical data centers rely on fiber-optic interconnects to remove similar networking bottlenecks and to allow for reconfigurable, software-defined infrastructures. In the same spirit, ultra-cold electro-optic links have been proposed and used to generate qubit control signals, or to replace cryogenic readout electronics. So far, the latter suffered from either low efficiency, low bandwidth and the need for additional microwave drives, or breaking of Cooper pairs and qubit states. In this work we realize electro-optic microwave photonics at millikelvin temperatures to implement a radio-over-fiber qubit readout that does not require any active or passive cryogenic microwave equipment. We demonstrate all-optical single-shot-readout by means of the Jaynes-Cummings nonlinearity in a circulator-free readout scheme. Importantly, we do not observe any direct radiation impact on the qubit state as verified with high-fidelity quantum-non-demolition measurements despite the absence of shielding elements. This compatibility between superconducting circuits and telecom wavelength light is not only a prerequisite to establish modular quantum networks, it is also relevant for multiplexed readout of superconducting photon detectors and classical superconducting logic. Moreover, this experiment showcases the potential of electro-optic radiometry in harsh environments - an electronics-free sensing principle that extends into the THz regime with applications in radio astronomy, planetary missions and earth observation.},
  author       = {Arnold, Georg M and Werner, Thomas and Sahu, Rishabh and Kapoor, Lucky and Qiu, Liu and Fink, Johannes M},
  booktitle    = {arXiv},
  title        = {{All-optical single-shot readout of a superconducting qubit}},
  doi          = {10.48550/ARXIV.2310.16817},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{13117,
  abstract     = {The ability to control the direction of scattered light is crucial to provide flexibility and scalability for a wide range of on-chip applications, such as integrated photonics, quantum information processing, and nonlinear optics. Tunable directionality can be achieved by applying external magnetic fields that modify optical selection rules, by using nonlinear effects, or interactions with vibrations. However, these approaches are less suitable to control microwave photon propagation inside integrated superconducting quantum devices. Here, we demonstrate on-demand tunable directional scattering based on two periodically modulated transmon qubits coupled to a transmission line at a fixed distance. By changing the relative phase between the modulation tones, we realize unidirectional forward or backward photon scattering. Such an in-situ switchable mirror represents a versatile tool for intra- and inter-chip microwave photonic processors. In the future, a lattice of qubits can be used to realize topological circuits that exhibit strong nonreciprocity or chirality.},
  author       = {Redchenko, Elena and Poshakinskiy, Alexander V. and Sett, Riya and Zemlicka, Martin and Poddubny, Alexander N. and Fink, Johannes M},
  issn         = {2041-1723},
  journal      = {Nature Communications},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Tunable directional photon scattering from a pair of superconducting qubits}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41467-023-38761-6},
  volume       = {14},
  year         = {2023},
}

@article{11591,
  abstract     = {We investigate the deterministic generation and distribution of entanglement in large quantum networks by driving distant qubits with the output fields of a nondegenerate parametric amplifier. In this setting, the amplifier produces a continuous Gaussian two-mode squeezed state, which acts as a quantum-correlated reservoir for the qubits and relaxes them into a highly entangled steady state. Here we are interested in the maximal amount of entanglement and the optimal entanglement generation rates that can be achieved with this scheme under realistic conditions taking, in particular, the finite amplifier bandwidth, waveguide losses, and propagation delays into account. By combining exact numerical simulations of the full network with approximate analytic results, we predict the optimal working point for the amplifier and the corresponding qubit-qubit entanglement under various conditions. Our findings show that this passive conversion of Gaussian into discrete-variable entanglement offers a robust and experimentally very attractive approach for operating large optical, microwave, or hybrid quantum networks, for which efficient parametric amplifiers are currently developed.},
  author       = {Agustí, J. and Minoguchi, Y. and Fink, Johannes M and Rabl, P.},
  issn         = {2469-9934},
  journal      = {Physical Review A},
  number       = {6},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Long-distance distribution of qubit-qubit entanglement using Gaussian-correlated photonic beams}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PhysRevA.105.062454},
  volume       = {105},
  year         = {2022},
}

@inproceedings{12088,
  abstract     = {We present a quantum-enabled microwave-telecom interface with bidirectional conversion efficiencies up to 15% and added input noise quanta as low as 0.16. Moreover, we observe evidence for electro-optic laser cooling and vacuum amplification.},
  author       = {Sahu, Rishabh and Hease, William J and Rueda Sanchez, Alfredo R and Arnold, Georg M and Qiu, Liu and Fink, Johannes M},
  booktitle    = {Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics},
  isbn         = {9781557528209},
  location     = {San Jose, CA, United States},
  publisher    = {Optica Publishing Group},
  title        = {{Realizing a quantum-enabled interconnect between microwave and telecom light}},
  doi          = {10.1364/CLEO_QELS.2022.FW4D.4},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{10940,
  abstract     = {Magnetic-field-resilient superconducting circuits enable sensing applications and hybrid quantum computing architectures involving spin or topological qubits and electromechanical elements, as well as studying flux noise and quasiparticle loss. We investigate the effect of in-plane magnetic fields up to 1 T on the spectrum and coherence times of thin-film three-dimensional aluminum transmons. Using a copper cavity, unaffected by strong magnetic fields, we can probe solely the effect of magnetic fields on the transmons. We present data on a single-junction and a superconducting-quantum-interference-device (SQUID) transmon that are cooled down in the same cavity. As expected, the transmon frequencies decrease with increasing field, due to suppression of the superconducting gap and a geometric Fraunhofer-like contribution. Nevertheless, the thin-film transmons show strong magnetic field resilience: both transmons display microsecond coherence up to at least 0.65 T, and T1 remains above 1μs over the entire measurable range. SQUID spectroscopy is feasible up to 1 T, the limit of our magnet. We conclude that thin-film aluminum Josephson junctions are suitable hardware for superconducting circuits in the high-magnetic-field regime.},
  author       = {Krause, J. and Dickel, C. and Vaal, E. and Vielmetter, M. and Feng, J. and Bounds, R. and Catelani, G. and Fink, Johannes M and Ando, Yoichi},
  issn         = {2331-7019},
  journal      = {Physical Review Applied},
  number       = {3},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Magnetic field resilience of three-dimensional transmons with thin-film Al/AlOx/Al Josephson junctions approaching 1 T}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PhysRevApplied.17.034032},
  volume       = {17},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11417,
  abstract     = {Over the past few years, the field of quantum information science has seen tremendous progress toward realizing large-scale quantum computers. With demonstrations of quantum computers outperforming classical computers for a select range of problems,1–3 we have finally entered the noisy, intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) computing era. While the quantum computers of today are technological marvels, they are not yet error corrected, and it is unclear whether any system will scale beyond a few hundred logical qubits without significant changes to architecture and control schemes. Today's quantum systems are analogous to the ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer) and EDVAC (Electronic Discrete Variable Automatic Computer) systems of the 1940s, which ran on vacuum tubes. These machines were built on a solid, nominally scalable architecture and when they were developed, nobody could have predicted the development of the transistor and the impact of the resulting semiconductor industry. Simply put, the computers of today are nothing like the early computers of the 1940s. We believe that the qubits of future fault-tolerant quantum systems will look quite different from the qubits of the NISQ machines in operation today. This Special Topic issue is devoted to new and emerging quantum systems with a focus on enabling technologies that can eventually lead to the quantum analog to the transistor. We have solicited both research4–18 and perspective articles19–21 to discuss new and emerging qubit systems with a focus on novel materials, encodings, and architectures. We are proud to present a collection that touches on a wide range of technologies including superconductors,7–13,21 semiconductors,15–17,19 and individual atomic qubits.18
},
  author       = {Sigillito, Anthony J. and Covey, Jacob P. and Fink, Johannes M and Petersson, Karl and Preble, Stefan},
  issn         = {0003-6951},
  journal      = {Applied Physics Letters},
  number       = {19},
  publisher    = {American Institute of Physics},
  title        = {{Emerging qubit systems: Guest editorial}},
  doi          = {10.1063/5.0097339},
  volume       = {120},
  year         = {2022},
}

@misc{14520,
  abstract     = {This dataset comprises all data shown in the figures of the submitted article "Compact vacuum gap transmon qubits: Selective and sensitive probes for superconductor surface losses" at arxiv.org/abs/2206.14104. Additional raw data are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.},
  author       = {Zemlicka, Martin and Redchenko, Elena and Peruzzo, Matilda and Hassani, Farid and Trioni, Andrea and Barzanjeh, Shabir and Fink, Johannes M},
  publisher    = {Zenodo},
  title        = {{Compact vacuum gap transmon qubits: Selective and sensitive probes for superconductor surface losses}},
  doi          = {10.5281/ZENODO.8408897},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{10924,
  abstract     = {Solid-state microwave systems offer strong interactions for fast quantum logic and sensing but photons at telecom wavelength are the ideal choice for high-density low-loss quantum interconnects. A general-purpose interface that can make use of single photon effects requires < 1 input noise quanta, which has remained elusive due to either low efficiency or pump induced heating. Here we demonstrate coherent electro-optic modulation on nanosecond-timescales with only 0.16+0.02−0.01 microwave input noise photons with a total bidirectional transduction efficiency of 8.7% (or up to 15% with 0.41+0.02−0.02), as required for near-term heralded quantum network protocols. The use of short and high-power optical pump pulses also enables near-unity cooperativity of the electro-optic interaction leading to an internal pure conversion efficiency of up to 99.5%. Together with the low mode occupancy this provides evidence for electro-optic laser cooling and vacuum amplification as predicted a decade ago.},
  author       = {Sahu, Rishabh and Hease, William J and Rueda Sanchez, Alfredo R and Arnold, Georg M and Qiu, Liu and Fink, Johannes M},
  issn         = {2041-1723},
  journal      = {Nature Communications},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Quantum-enabled operation of a microwave-optical interface}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41467-022-28924-2},
  volume       = {13},
  year         = {2022},
}

