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Down-conversion of a single photon as a probe of many-body localization

Author

Listed:
  • Nitish Mehta

    (University of Maryland)

  • Roman Kuzmin

    (University of Maryland
    University of Wisconsin-Madison)

  • Cristiano Ciuti

    (Université Paris Cité, CNRS, Matériaux et Phénomènes Quantiques)

  • Vladimir E. Manucharyan

    (University of Maryland
    École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne)

Abstract

Decay of a particle into more particles is a ubiquitous phenomenon to interacting quantum systems, taking place in colliders, nuclear reactors or solids. In a nonlinear medium, even a single photon would decay by down-converting (splitting) into lower-frequency photons with the same total energy1, at a rate given by Fermi’s golden rule. However, the energy-conservation condition cannot be matched precisely if the medium is finite and only supports quantized modes. In this case, the fate of the photon becomes the long-standing question of many-body localization, originally formulated as a gedanken experiment for the lifetime of a single Fermi-liquid quasiparticle confined to a quantum dot2. Here we implement such an experiment using a superconducting multimode cavity, the nonlinearity of which was tailored to strongly violate the photon-number conservation. The resulting interaction attempts to convert a single photon excitation into a shower of low-energy photons but fails owing to the many-body localization mechanism, which manifests as a striking spectral fine structure of multiparticle resonances at the standing-wave-mode frequencies of the cavity. Each resonance was identified as a many-body state of radiation composed of photons from a broad frequency range and not obeying Fermi’s golden rule theory. Our result introduces a new platform to explore the fundamentals of many-body localization without having to control many atoms or qubits3–9.

Suggested Citation

  • Nitish Mehta & Roman Kuzmin & Cristiano Ciuti & Vladimir E. Manucharyan, 2023. "Down-conversion of a single photon as a probe of many-body localization," Nature, Nature, vol. 613(7945), pages 650-655, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:613:y:2023:i:7945:d:10.1038_s41586-022-05615-y
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05615-y
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