We report on the design and performance of an on-chip microwave circulator with a widely (GHz) tunable operation frequency. Nonreciprocity is created with a combination of frequency conversion and delay, and requires neither permanent magnets nor microwave bias tones, allowing on-chip integration with other superconducting circuits without the need for high-bandwidth control lines. Isolation in the device exceeds 20 dB over a bandwidth of tens of MHz, and its insertion loss is small, reaching as low as 0.9 dB at select operation frequencies. Furthermore, the device is linear with respect to input power for signal powers up to hundreds of fW (≈10 3 circulating photons), and the direction of circulation can be dynamically reconfigured. We demonstrate its operation at a selection of frequencies between 4 and 6 GHz.
We construct a metamaterial from radio-frequency harmonic oscillators, and find two topologically distinct phases resulting from dissipation engineered into the system. These phases are distinguished by a quantized value of bulk energy transport. The impulse response of our circuit is measured and used to reconstruct the band structure and winding number of circuit eigenfunctions around a dark mode. Our results demonstrate that dissipative topological transport can occur in a wider class of physical systems than considered before.
We introduce and experimentally characterize a general purpose device for
signal processing in circuit quantum electrodynamics systems. The device is a
broadband two-port microwave circuit element with three modes of operation: it
can transmit, reflect, or invert incident signals between 4 and 8 GHz. This
property makes it a versatile tool for lossless signal processing at cryogenic
temperatures. In particular, rapid switching (less than or equal to 15 ns)
between these operation modes enables several multiplexing readout protocols
for superconducting qubits. We report the device's performance in a two-channel
code domain multiplexing demonstration. The multiplexed data are recovered with
fast readout times (up to 400 ns) and infidelities less than 0.01 for probe
powers greater than 7 fW, in agreement with the expectation for binary
signaling with Gaussian noise.Comment: 4 pages main text, 4 pages supplementary information, 2 pages
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