Physics

Measurement of Power Levels One Trillion Times Lower Than Usual by Quantum Scientists

Measurement of Power Levels One Trillion Times Lower Than Usual by Quantum Scientists

A nanodevice created by Finnish researchers can detect microwave radiation’s absolute power down to the femtowatt level at extremely low temperatures, a scale a trillion times smaller than that typically employed in reliable power measurements. The system could make substantial progress in microwave measurements for quantum technology.

Measuring extremely low power

Dilution refrigerators are tools used to conduct most quantum physics at extremely low temperatures. Additionally, the investigations must be conducted at extremely low energy levels, such as those of a single photon or even lower.

Since heat is a recurring issue for quantum devices, researchers must take heat into consideration while measuring these incredibly low energy levels. A unique sort of thermometer known as a bolometer is used by scientists to monitor heat in quantum research.

An exceptionally accurate bolometer was recently developed at Aalto by a team led by Mikko Möttönen, associate professor of quantum technology at Aalto and VTT, but the device had more uncertainty than they had hoped for. They were able to observe the relative power level, but they weren’t particularly precise in estimating the total amount of energy.

In the new study, Möttönen’s team worked with researchers at the quantum-technology companies Bluefors and IQM, and VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland to improve the bolometer.

Measuring microwaves happens in wireless communications, radar technology, and many other fields. They have their ways of performing accurate measurements, but there was no way to do the same when measuring very weak microwave signals for quantum technology. The bolometer is an advanced diagnostic instrument that has been missing from the quantum technology toolbox until now.

Russell Lake

“We added a heater to the bolometer, so we can apply a known heater current and measure the voltage. Since we know the precise amount of power we’re putting into the heater, we can calibrate the power of the input radiation against the heater power. The result is a self-calibrating bolometer working at low temperatures, which allows us to accurately measure absolute powers at cryogenic temperatures,” Möttönen says.

According to Russell Lake, director of quantum applications at Bluefors, the new bolometer is a significant step forward in measuring microwave power.

Commercial power sensors typically measure power at the scale of one milliwatt. This bolometer does that accurately and reliably at one femtowatt or below. That’s a trillion times less power than used in typical power calibrations.

Covering both deep and wide scales

Möttönen explains that the new bolometer could improve the performance of quantum computers. “For accurate results, the measurement lines used to control qubits should be at very low temperatures, void of any thermal photons and excess radiation. Now with this bolometer, we can actually measure that radiation temperature without interference from the qubit circuitry,” he says.

The bolometer also covers a very broad range of frequencies.

“The sensor is broadband, which means that it can measure what is the power absorbed in various frequencies. This is not a given in quantum technology as usually the sensors are limited to a very narrow band,” says Jean-Philippe Girard, a scientist at Bluefors who also previously worked at Aalto on the device.

The team says the bolometer provides a major boost to quantum technology fields.

“Measuring microwaves happens in wireless communications, radar technology, and many other fields. They have their ways of performing accurate measurements, but there was no way to do the same when measuring very weak microwave signals for quantum technology. The bolometer is an advanced diagnostic instrument that has been missing from the quantum technology toolbox until now,” Lake says.

The work is the outcome of a fluid partnership between Aalto University and Bluefors, a prime illustration of how academia and business can strengthen one another. The device was developed at Aalto’s Quantum Computing and Devices (QCD) group, which is part of the Academy of Finland Centre of Excellence in Quantum Technology (QTF).

They used Micronova cleanrooms that belong to the national research infrastructure OtaNano. Since the first experiments at Aalto, Bluefors has also successfully tested these devices in their own industrial facilities.

“That shows that this is not just a lucky break in a university lab, but something that both the industrial and the academic professionals working in quantum technology can benefit from,” Möttönen says.