On the 2025 physics Nobel Prize: Launching the era of superconducting quantum electrical circuits

On the 2025 physics Nobel Prize: Launching the era of superconducting quantum electrical circuits

04.05.2026 18:00 – 19:00

Who and why? In their pioneering work carried out at Berkeley in the mid1980s, the laureates, John Clarke John Martinis and Michel Devoret, first demonstrated that a collective electrical variable, namely the phase difference across a Josephson junction, obeys the rules of quantum mechanics, an issue raised by A.J Leggett. They measured the so-called macroscopic quantum tunneling rate of the junction out of its zero-voltage state, and they demonstrated that the phase has well defined quantum states between which transitions can be induced by applying a resonant microwave signal. These results triggered a huge activity in the field of superconducting quantum circuits for first making quantum bits, and later quantum processors and quantum sensors. I will review some of the main results obtained in this area, and noticeably those of our Quantronics group at CEA Saclay.

Lieu

Bâtiment: Ecole de Physique

Auditoire Stückelberg

Organisé par

Section de physique
Associations d'étudiant-es
AEPQM - Association des étudiant-es pour la physique quantique moderne

Intervenant-e-s

Antoine Estève, Prof.

entrée libre

Classement

Catégorie: Séminaire

Plus d'infos

quantumclub.unige.ch/event/04-05-2026-esteve/

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