The parity of the number of elementary excitations present in a quantum system provides important insights into its physical properties. Parity measurements are used, for example, to tomographically reconstruct quantum states or to determine if a decay of an excitation has occurred, information which can be used for quantum error correction in computation or communication protocols. Here we demonstrate a versatile parity detector for propagating microwaves, which distinguishes between radiation fields containing an even or odd number n of photons, both in a single-shot measurement and without perturbing the parity of the detected field. We showcase applications of the detector for direct Wigner tomography of propagating microwaves and heralded generation of Schrödinger cat states. This parity detection scheme is applicable over a broad frequency range and may prove useful, for example, for heralded or fault-tolerant quantum communication protocols. * jbesse@phys.ethz.ch † Current address: Quantum Technology Laboratory, Chalmers University of Technology, SE-412 96 Gteborg, Sweden qubits for measurement based entanglement generation [13], for elements of error correction [14][15][16], and entanglement stabilization [17], an experiment which was also performed with ions [18,19].
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