Questo sito utilizza cookie per implementare la tua navigazione e inviarti pubblicità e servizi in linea con le tue preferenze. Chiudendo questo banner, scorrendo questa pagina o cliccando qualunque suo elemento acconsenti all'uso dei cookie. Per saperne di più clicca leggi

Living out Einstein's dreams - French researchers make quantum breakthrough

Valutazione attuale:  / 0
ScarsoOttimo 
A team of EU-funded researchers has, for the first time, successfully carried out a constant stabilisation experiment of a quantum state - something Albert Einstein himself once dreamt of.


Einstein famously stated he wanted to trap a photon in a box for around a second, and now a team of French scientists has managed to go one step further by maintaining a constant number of photons in a high-quality microwave cavity in a permanent manner, as they outline in a new study published in the journal Nature.

The study, led by scientists from the Laboratoire Kastler Brossel in Paris, received a funding boost as part of the AQUTE ('Atomic quantum technologies') project, which is funded in part to the tune of EUR 5,300,000 under the 'Information and communication technologies' Theme of the European Commission's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).

In addition, project researcher Serge Haroche, from the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, received EUR 2.5 million of funding as part of an Advanced Grant from the European Research Council (ERC). This funding was part of a project titled DECLIC ('Exploring the Decoherence of Light in Cavities').

Building on a breakthrough they made four years ago, where they observed a single and same microwave photon trapped in a box hundreds of times over, in this new study the team stabilised a given number of photons in a 'photon box', a cavity formed of two superconducting mirrors. It is the first time a complete experiment of quantum stabilisation has occurred.

Usually the photon, the basic unit of light, can only be observed when it disappears. The eye absorbs photons, destroying them and translating the information they carry as it is recorded.

Stabilisations play a major role in our everyday lives as they ensure the operation of many systems that surround us, such as in an oven where its heating temperature is dependent on a set value. As long as the ideal temperature has not been reached, the oven continues to heat up then maintains its state according to the thermostat readings.

The main aim of the DECLIC project is to understand the transition from quantum to classical devices. Quantum information thrives to build large quantum systems for tasks in communication or computing beyond the reach of classical devices; but questions remain surrounding whether another mechanism responsible for the disappearance of state super-positions at the macroscopic scale could exist, in addition to environment-induced decoherence.

The DECLIC project, which runs until 2015, was set up to explore the dynamics of fields trapped in cavities and to study their decoherence under various perspectives. It will implement novel ways to generate non-classical states with large photon numbers stored in one cavity or non-locally split between two.

The AQUTE project's main aims are to develop quantum technologies based on atomic, molecular and optical (AMO) systems for scalable quantum computation and entanglement-enabled technologies like metrology and sensing.

In addition, scientists on the various projects funded as part of AQUTE hope to establish and exploit new interdisciplinary connections, coming from AMO physics, as well as concepts and experimental settings of solid state systems to reinforce interdisciplinary links where quantum information science and other fields of physics meet. AQUTE runs until 2013 and involves researchers from Australia, Austria, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Singapore, Spain, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States