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@ARTICLE{Pop:153333,
author = {Pop, Ioan M. and Geerlings, Kurtis and Catelani, Gianluigi
and Schoelkopf, Robert J. and Glazman, Leonid I. and
Devoret, Michel H.},
title = {{C}oherent suppression of electromagnetic dissipation due
to superconducting quasiparticles},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {508},
number = {7496},
issn = {1476-4687},
address = {London [u.a.]},
publisher = {Nature Publising Group78092},
reportid = {FZJ-2014-02965},
pages = {369 - 372},
year = {2014},
abstract = {Owing to the low-loss propagation of electromagnetic
signals in superconductors, Josephson junctions constitute
ideal building blocks for quantum memories, amplifiers,
detectors and high-speed processing units, operating over a
wide band of microwave frequencies. Nevertheless, although
transport in superconducting wires is perfectly lossless for
direct current, transport of radio-frequency signals can be
dissipative in the presence of quasiparticle excitations
above the superconducting gap1. Moreover, the exact
mechanism of this dissipation in Josephson junctions has
never been fully resolved experimentally. In particular,
Josephson’s key theoretical prediction that quasiparticle
dissipation should vanish in transport through a junction
when the phase difference across the junction is π (ref. 2)
has never been observed3. This subtle effect can be
understood as resulting from the destructive interference of
two separate dissipative channels involving electron-like
and hole-like quasiparticles. Here we report the
experimental observation of this quantum coherent
suppression of quasiparticle dissipation across a Josephson
junction. As the average phase bias across the junction is
swept through π, we measure an increase of more than one
order of magnitude in the energy relaxation time of a
superconducting artificial atom. This striking suppression
of dissipation, despite the presence of lossy quasiparticle
excitations above the superconducting gap, provides a
powerful tool for minimizing decoherence in quantum
electronic systems and could be directly exploited in
quantum information experiments with superconducting quantum
bits.},
cin = {PGI-2},
ddc = {070},
cid = {I:(DE-Juel1)PGI-2-20110106},
pnm = {422 - Spin-based and quantum information (POF2-422)},
pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF2-422},
typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
UT = {WOS:000334403000046},
pubmed = {pmid:24740067},
doi = {10.1038/nature13017},
url = {https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/153333},
}