Michel H. Devoret

From Macroscopic Quantum Phenomena to Artificial Atoms

Monday, 29 June 2026
09:30 - 10:00 CEST

Details

Inselhalle

Main Hall

Abstract

Forty years ago, a fundamental inquiry into the possible quantum-ness of macroscopic variables – currents and voltages – launched the field of quantum superconducting circuits. This Lecture traces the journey from the foundational experiments at Berkeley that first uncovered macroscopic quantum tunneling and energy quantization to the current era of “artificial atoms”. Unlike natural atoms, these engineered systems allow for precise control over energy levels and matrix elements by tailoring dimensional parameters.

We will discuss how the ground and first excited states of these circuits are now utilized as qubits in processors exceeding 100 qubits, capable of executing quantum algorithms that challenge classical computation. Beyond computation and error correction, we highlight the transformative impact of superconducting circuits on quantum sensing, specifically their ability to amplify microwave signals at the fundamental limits of quantum physics.

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