On-chip Dicke-type magnon polaritons in the ultrastrong coupling regime via spatially separated nanomagnets
Abstract
Quantum electrodynamics lies at the heart of hybrid quantum systems essential for future technologies. The thermodynamic limit of the Dicke model, a fundamental model describing these systems, predicts exotic quantum phenomena, such as equilibrium superradiant phase transitions and ground-state two-mode squeezing. However, the experimental realization of genuine Dicke systems has remained elusive due to the inevitable existence of gauge-invariant self-interaction terms that hinder such phenomena. Here, we report on the on-chip realization of a Dicke-type system utilizing ultrastrong magnetic-dipole interactions between collective excitations in a spatially separated ferromagnetic array and a superconducting resonator, resulting in creation of magnon polaritons. Crucially, this spatially separated architecture allows the cooperative enhancement of the coupling strength without increasing the self-interaction energy. We experimentally confirm the Bloch-Siegert shift, originating from the counter-rotating terms, alongside the suppression of self-excitation terms required to observe critical Dicke physics. Our results establish a versatile platform, which provides the playground to explore quantum collective coupling physics and open pathways towards integrated quantum devices harnessing Dicke physics.
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