Discover the latest scientific publication of EQUBITFLY in Nature Nanotechnology by H. Bartolomei et al.
Time resolved sensing of electromagnetic fields with single-electron interferometry.
H. Bartolomei, E. Frigerio, M. Ruelle, G. Rebora, Y. Jin, U. Gender, A. Cavanna, E. Baudin, J.-M. Berroir, I. Safi, P. Degiovanni, G.C. Ménard, and G. Fève. Nature Nanotechnology (2025).
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41565-025-01888-2
Abstract:
Characterizing quantum states of the electromagnetic field at microwave frequencies requires fast and sensitive detectors that can simultaneously probe the field’s time-dependent amplitude and its quantum fluctuations. So far, this has been achieved by using either homodyne detection or fast digitizers. Both methods rely on the extraction of microwave radiation through an amplification chain towards the detector placed at room temperature, thereby limiting the time resolution to the ~10-GHz bandwidth of the measurement chain. Additionally, the coupling of high-impedance samples to the 50-Ω measurement chain is very weak, setting strong limitations on the detection sensitivity. In this work, we demonstrate an on-chip quantum sensor that exploits the phase of a single-electron wavefunction, measured in an electronic Fabry–Pérot interferometer, to detect the amplitude of a classical time-dependent electric field. The interferometer is implemented in a GaAs/AlGaAs quantum Hall conductor. The time resolution, limited by the temporal width of the electronic wavepacket, is ~35 ps. The interferometry technique provides a voltage resolution of ~50 μV, corresponding to a few microwave photons. Importantly, our detector measures both phase and contrast of the interference pattern. The latter opens the way to the detection of non-classical electromagnetic fields, such as squeezed or Fock states.