Our team recently visited the Simon Lab in Chicago where they use Red Pitaya for quantum experiments.
Topics of investigation include, among others, laser-cooled atoms offering an isolated platform for research on quantum coherence, thanks to the fact they hardly move due to their low temperature, and can persist unperturbed because of the high-vacuum conditions. Micro-Kelvin temperatures can be reached, using a combination of near-resonant laser and magnetic files, as well as far-tuned high-power lasers for trapping and transport.
Another research example exists of cavity Rydberg polaritons for the exploration of photons in near-degenerate multimode cavities, where they act as massive, harmonically trapped particles. These charged photons are coupled to an ensemble of Rydberg-dressed cold atoms, interacting strongly due to their size. The Simon Lab is now working to use this platform to explore the fractional quantum Hall physics of photons in curved space, as well as a tool to make photonic quantum information processors.
These and other systems contain a wide range of resonators, cavities, and other high-frequency harmonic systems, which need to be driven, controlled, monitored, analyzed and filtered. In working on this project, the Simon Lab has come to understand the tremendous added value of FPGAs, not only because they represent high-bandwidth, low latency experimental control hardware, but also due to the fact that they are reconfigurable, meaning they offer endless flexibility for integration in almost any project.
This is, of course, where Red Pitaya comes into the picture, combining high-frequency signal generation and processing with flexible configuration. The Simon Lab has chosen STEMLab 125-14 units to be used as FPGAs in their projects, which is why they invited Red Pitaya´s CEO Mateja Lampe Rupnik and CTO Črt Valentinčič to visit their facilities last April, and see where these units are being implemented. Some examples of completed projects can be found below, with more details at http://simonlab.uchicago.edu/FPGA.html, where the related configuration files can also be downloaded.
Both the Simon Lab and Red Pitaya can clearly be considered champions of innovation and scientific/technological creativity, even if in different fields. As such, it´s quite easy to understand why they make such a great quantum match.