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Macroscopic Quantum Tunneling with Nobel Laureate John Martinis

Nov 26, 2025
John Martinis, a Nobel laureate and pioneer in superconducting quantum circuits, joins the discussion to unravel the fascinating world of macroscopic quantum tunneling. He delves into the evolution of synthetic atoms and the importance of Josephson junctions in quantum technology. Martinis emphasizes the critical role of fabrication and error correction in scaling quantum systems. He also reflects on the transition from basic qubit physics to engineering challenges, and the collaborative spirit that initially defined the field before commercialization changed the landscape.
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INSIGHT

Synthetic Atoms Enable Macroscopic Quantum Physics

  • Quantum mechanics applies to engineered macroscopic circuits when conditions are right, creating "synthetic atoms" from capacitors, inductors, and Josephson junctions.
  • John Martinis highlights this expands quantum physics beyond natural atoms into scalable engineered systems.
ANECDOTE

A Failed Experiment Led To Microwave Filtering

  • Martinis recounts an early failed experiment where their Josephson junction wiring produced nonsensical thermal escape data from 1–4 K.
  • They fixed it by adding microwave filtering and defining the junction's microwave impedance, which made the data align with theory.
INSIGHT

Iterative Experiments Built Confidence

  • Successive careful experiments increased confidence that superconducting circuits were 'clean enough' for more sophisticated quantum work.
  • That iterative learning over about a decade enabled qubit experiments and two-level demonstrations.
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