Researchers in the Netherlands have demonstrated the first chip-based device capable of splitting phonons, which are quanta of mechanical vibrations. Known as a single-phonon directional coupler, or more simply as a phonon splitter, the new device could make it easier for different types of quantum technologies to “talk” to each other. For example, it could be used to transfer quantum information from spins, which offer advantages for data storage, to superconducting circuits, which may be better for data processing.
“One of the main advantages of phonons over photons is they interact with a lot of different things,” explains team leader Simon Gröblacher of the Kavli Institute of Nanoscience at Delft University of Technology. “So it’s very easy to make them interface with systems.”
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