Quantum information: From foundations to experiments Second Lecture Luiz Davidovich Instituto de Física Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro BRAZIL.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Quantum Computation and Quantum Information – Lecture 2
Advertisements

Quantum Disentanglement Eraser
Quantum Walks, Quantum Gates, and Quantum Computers Andrew Hines P.C.E. Stamp [Palm Beach, Gold Coast, Australia]
QND measurement of photons Quantum Zeno Effect & Schrödingers Cat Julien BERNU YEP 2007.
Superconducting qubits
Quantum Computing MAS 725 Hartmut Klauck NTU
The Quantum Mechanics of Simple Systems
The Wigner Function Chen Levi. Eugene Paul Wigner Received the Nobel Prize for Physics in
Emergence of Quantum Mechanics from Classical Statistics.
Suppressing decoherence and heating with quantum bang-bang controls David Vitali and Paolo Tombesi Dip. di Matematica e Fisica and Unità INFM, Università.
Observing the quantum nonlocality in the state of a massive particle Koji Maruyama RIKEN (Institute of Physical and Chemical Research) with Sahel Ashhab.
Backward Evolving Quantum State Lev Vaidman 2 March 2006.
Universal Optical Operations in Quantum Information Processing Wei-Min Zhang ( Physics Dept, NCKU )
Strongly Correlated Systems of Ultracold Atoms Theory work at CUA.
Niels Bohr Institute Copenhagen University Eugene PolzikLECTURE 5.
The Integration Algorithm A quantum computer could integrate a function in less computational time then a classical computer... The integral of a one dimensional.
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME Xiangning Luo EE 698A Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Notre Dame Superconducting Devices for Quantum Computation.
Decoherence or why the world behaves classically Daniel Braun, Walter Strunz, Fritz Haake PRL 86, 2913 (2001), PRA 67, & (2003)
Deterministic teleportation of electrons in a quantum dot nanostructure Deics III, 28 February 2006 Richard de Visser David DiVincenzo (IBM, Yorktown Heights)
Quantum Computing Joseph Stelmach.
Almost all detection of visible light is by the “photoelectric effect” (broadly defined.) There is always a threshold photon energy for detection, even.
Theory of Dynamical Casimir Effect in nonideal cavities with time-dependent parameters Victor V. Dodonov Instituto de Física, Universidade de Brasília,
Quantum Mechanics from Classical Statistics. what is an atom ? quantum mechanics : isolated object quantum mechanics : isolated object quantum field theory.
Quantum Cryptography Prafulla Basavaraja CS 265 – Spring 2005.
Quantum Computation and Quantum Information – Lecture 2 Part 1 of CS406 – Research Directions in Computing Dr. Rajagopal Nagarajan Assistant: Nick Papanikolaou.
E n t a n g l e m e n t Teleportation Alice and Bob Nonlocal influences Fidelity (a) Paranormal phenomena (b) Men are from Mars. Women are from Venus (c)
Quantum Information Processing
Quantum computing Alex Karassev. Quantum Computer Quantum computer uses properties of elementary particle that are predicted by quantum mechanics Usual.
Experimental Quantum Teleportation Quantum systems for Information Technology Kambiz Behfar Phani Kumar.
Interfacing quantum optical and solid state qubits Cambridge, Sept 2004 Lin Tian Universität Innsbruck Motivation: ion trap quantum computing; future roads.
Quantum Devices (or, How to Build Your Own Quantum Computer)
Фото MANIPULATING THE QUANTUM STATE OF SINGLE ATOMS AND PHOTONS works of Nobel Laureates in physics 2012 A.V.Masalov Lebedev Physics Institute, RAS, Moscow.
QUANTUM ENTANGLEMENT AND IMPLICATIONS IN INFORMATION PROCESSING: Quantum TELEPORTATION K. Mangala Sunder Department of Chemistry IIT Madras.
Alice and Bob’s Excellent Adventure
Generation of Mesoscopic Superpositions of Two Squeezed States of Motion for A Trapped Ion Shih-Chuan Gou ( 郭西川 ) Department of Physics National Changhua.
Quantum computing with Rydberg atoms Klaus Mølmer Coherence school Pisa, September 2012.
Jian-Wei Pan Decoherence-free sub-space and quantum error-rejection Jian-Wei Pan Lecture Note 7.
A deterministic source of entangled photons David Vitali, Giacomo Ciaramicoli, and Paolo Tombesi Dip. di Matematica e Fisica and Unità INFM, Università.
Witnessing Quantum Coherence IWQSE 2013, NTU Oct. 15 (2013) Yueh-Nan Chen ( 陳岳男 ) Dep. of Physics, NCKU National Center for Theoretical Sciences (South)
Quantum computation: Why, what, and how I.Qubitology and quantum circuits II.Quantum algorithms III. Physical implementations Carlton M. Caves University.
An Introduction to Quantum Phenomena and their Effect on Computing Peter Shoemaker MSCS Candidate March 7 th, 2003.
Introduction to Spectroscopy
PROPOSAL OF A UNIVERSAL QUANTUM COPYING MACHINE IN CAVITY QED Joanna Gonzalez Miguel Orszag Sergio Dagach Facultad de Física Pontificia Universidad Católica.
DECOHERENCE AND QUANTUM INFORMATION JUAN PABLO PAZ Departamento de Fisica, FCEyN Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina Paraty August 2007.
Meet the transmon and his friends
School of something FACULTY OF OTHER School of Physics and Astronomy FACULTY OF MATHEMATICAL AND PHYSICAL SCIENCES Putting entanglement to work: Super-dense.
Information Processing by Single Particle Hybrid Entangled States Archan S. Majumdar S. N. Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences Kolkata, India Collaborators:
You Did Not Just Read This or did you?. Quantum Computing Dave Bacon Department of Computer Science & Engineering University of Washington Lecture 3:
Quantum Dense coding and Quantum Teleportation
Bell Measurements and Teleportation. Overview Entanglement Bell states and Bell measurements Limitations on Bell measurements using linear devices Teleportation.
Multiparticle Entangled States of the W- class, their Properties and Applications A. Rodichkina, A. Basharov, V. Gorbachev Laboratory for Quantum Information.
Coherent cooling: a momentum state quantum computer Tim Freegarde Dipartimento di Fisica, Università di Trento, Povo, ItalyQuantum Optics & Laser.
Squeezing generation and revivals in a cavity-ion system Nicim Zagury Instituto de Física, Universidade Federal Rio de Janeiro, Brazil colaboradores: R.
Pablo Barberis Blostein y Marc Bienert
Introduction to Quantum Computing
IEN-Galileo Ferraris - Torino - 16 Febbraio 2006 Scheme for Entangling Micromeccanical Resonators by Entanglement Swapping Paolo Tombesi Stefano Mancini.
For long wavelength, compared to the size of the atom The term containing A 2 in the dipole approximation does not involve atomic operators, consequently.
Mesoscopic Physics Introduction Prof. I.V.Krive lecture presentation Address: Svobody Sq. 4, 61022, Kharkiv, Ukraine, Rooms. 5-46, 7-36, Phone: +38(057)707.
Review of lecture 5 and 6 Quantum phase space distributions: Wigner distribution and Hussimi distribution. Eigenvalue statistics: Poisson and Wigner level.
Interazioni e transizione superfluido-Mott. Bose-Hubbard model for interacting bosons in a lattice: Interacting bosons in a lattice SUPERFLUID Long-range.
Quantum Theory of the Coherently Pumped Micromaser István Németh and János Bergou University of West Hungary Department of Physics CEWQO 2008 Belgrade,
1924: de Broglie suggests particles are waves Mid-1925: Werner Heisenberg introduces Matrix Mechanics In 1927 he derives uncertainty principles Late 1925:
|| Quantum Systems for Information Technology FS2016 Quantum feedback control Moritz Businger & Max Melchner
Scheme for Entangling Micromeccanical Resonators
Outline Device & setup Initialization and read out
Quantum Teleportation
Coupled atom-cavity system
Quantum Information with Continuous Variables
OSU Quantum Information Seminar
Chapter 5 - Phonons II: Quantum Mechanics of Lattice Vibrations
Presentation transcript:

Quantum information: From foundations to experiments Second Lecture Luiz Davidovich Instituto de Física Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro BRAZIL

Possible level schemes

Measurement of the parity of the field

Atom in superposition of two states  superposition of two refraction indices (two media)  superposition of two fields with different phases M. Brune, J.M. Raimond, S. Haroche, L.D. et N. Zagury, PRA 45, 5193 (1992) Measuring decoherence in cavity QED

HOW TO DETECT THE COHERENCE ? Send a second atom! [L.D., A. Maali, M. Brune, J.M. Raimond, and S. Haroche, PRL 71, 2360 (1993); L.D., M. Brune, J.M. Raimond, and S. Haroche, PRA 53, 1295 (1996)]. Results for phase difference equal to  : Coherent superposition: preparation and probing atoms detected in the same state  P ee Coherent superposition: preparation and probing atoms detected in the same state  P ee  Statistical mixture: second atom detected in  e  or  g  with 50 % chance  P ee  /2Statistical mixture: second atom detected in  e  or  g  with 50 % chance  P ee  /2

PHYSICAL INTERPRETATION FOR  : DETECTION OF FIELD PARITY  /2 rotation Even number of photons: 2k  rotation (dispersive interaction)  /2 rotation Bloch sphere

A VARIANT Displace field in the cavity by  (by turning on the microwave field): What about dissipation? Exit of just one photon is enough to destroy superposition! If damping time of field is t cav, then it takes t cav /  n  t cav /4  2 for one photon to leave the cavity if state is  2 . Since there is only a 50% chance that the field is in this state, the time should be twice as large: t cav /2  2 Superposition of dark and lighted cavity

EFFECT OF DISSIPATION    t cav  n  Decoherence time: t cav  D  n   average number of photons in cavity L. D., M. Brune, J.M. Raimond, and S. Haroche, Phys. Rev. A 53, 1295 (1996).

EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS [Brune et al., PRL 77, 4887 (1996)] Plot of P ee  P eg

What about state of the field in the cavity? For classical particle with position q and momentum p, state is defined by distribution of points in phase space (just one point if one has precise information on q and p). Could this be done for the quantized electromagnetic field? Can one measure this phase-space representation?

PHASE-SPACE REPRESENTATION Look for representation with following properties: Pure state: Property must remain true if axes are rotated:

RADON TRANSFORM (1917) P(q  ) uniquely determines W(q,p)!  Radon inverse transform  tomography P(q  ) uniquely determines W(q,p)!  Radon inverse transform  tomography Cormack and Hounsfield: Nobel prize in Medicine (1979) Quantum mechanics: P(q  )  Wigner function (Bertrand and Bertrand, 1987)

THE WIGNER DISTRIBUTION Wigner, 1932: Quantum corrections to classical statistical mechanics Moyal, 1949: Average of operators in symmetric form: Density matrix in terms of W:

PAULI’S QUESTION Handbuch der Physik, 1933 – “The mathematical problem, as to whether for given functions W(x) and W’(p) [position and momentum probability densities], the wave function , if such a function exists, is always uniquely determined has not been investigated in all its generality.”

EXAMPLES OF WIGNER DISTRIBUTIONS Ground state Fock state n=3 Mixture  Superposition   Experimentally produced (ions, cavities)

MEASUREMENT OF THE MOTIONAL QUANTUM STATE OF A TRAPPED ION Wineland’s group – PRL 77, 4281 (1996)

Field quadratures

Phase-shift operator and generalized quadratures Generalized quadratures: Special cases:

MEASUREMENT OF QUADRATURES Risken and Vogel, 1989: homodyne measurements  P(q  )  Wigner function for EM field

EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS Smithey et al., PRL 70, 1244 (1993) SqueezedVacuum Breitenbach et al, Nature 387, 471 (1997)

MEASUREMENT OF THE WIGNER FUNCTION FOR ONE PHOTON Lvovsky et al, PRL 87, (2001)

WIGNER FUNCTION AND THE CLASSICAL LIMIT OF QUANTUM MECHANICS Dissipation leads to disappearance of interference fringes plus evolution towards ground state Decay time for fringes =dissipation time/2|  | 2 Evolution of coherent superposition of coherent states of harmonic oscillator, with dissipation    Fast decoherence: one needs a snapshot!

Another expression for the Wigner function

Displacement operator Translates position and momentum (or quadratures) in phase space Corresponds to action of external force for harmonic oscillator, or external current for the field

DIRECT MEASUREMENT OF THE WIGNER DISTRIBUTION L.G. Lutterbach and L.D., PRL 78, 2547 (1997) Based on following expression for Wigner function (Cahill and Glauber, 1969): Displacement operator Parity operator (phase shift of the field) Banaszek and Wódkiewicz (1996), Wallentowitz and Vogel (1996), Messina, Manko and Tombesi (1998), Banaszek et al (1999). Also used by Wineland’s group to measure Wigner function for vibrational state of trapped ion.

EXPERIMENTAL PROPOSAL 1.Displace field to be measured (turn on microwave) 2. Send atom, displace phase of the field by  iff atomic state is  e  3. Detect atomic state 4. Produce field anew, repeat procedure Problem: must produce shift equal to 

Quantum circuit for measuring the Wigner function

MEASUREMENT OF THE QUANTUM STATE OF A PHOTON IN A CAVITY – ENS Measurement of sub-Planck phase-space structure

A sensitive instrument… W. Zurek, Nature 412, 712 (2001) X p PXPX

Using this instrument for measuring small displacements and rotations

 System is prepared in a known input state  which experiences a small displacement transforming X into X+  We want to infer with minimum error from measurement performed on the displaced state  ’  exp(  i P) , where P is the momentum operator  If one measures X, then precision in the determination of the displacement is limited by  (width of wavepacket)  For coherent state, Measuring small displacements and rotations - standard quantum limit

Measurement of weak classical forces Classical force acting for a fixed time on a simple harmonic oscillator displaces the complex amplitude of the oscillator in phase space Action of the force in the interaction picture: Must resolve displacement in order to measure the force

Interference regions in Wigner function (“sub-Planck” structures) In order to have Minimum translation: Effect of small displacement Weak-force detection Much better than standard limit!

Wigner function of unperturbed states Product of Wigner functions: integration over blue areas cancels out integration over red areas Wigner function of perturbed states Small rotations

General strategy for measurement: couple oscillator to two-level system LOSCHMIDT ECHO!

Revisiting collapses and revivals J.H. Eberly, N.B. Narozhny, and J.J. Sanchez Mondragon, Phys. Rev. Lett. 44, 1323 (1980) J. Gea-Banacloche, Phys. Rev. A 44, 5913 (1991) Initial state  e , resonant interaction, described by Jaynes-Cummings model: Atom gets disentangled from field at time Field is left in a superposition of two coherent states  Displace it!

Echoes Echoes arise when through suitable manipulations in a system the dynamics is reversed and a more or less complete recovery of the initial state is achieved (ex: acoustical echoes arising from reflections of sound at walls) J. Loschmidt, Sitzungsber. Kais. Akad. Wiss. Wien Math. Naturwiss. Klasse –142 (1876) A. Peres, Phys. Rev. A 30, 1610–15 (1984) - Application to chaos

How to invert motion? Apply percussive 2  pulse to state  e  Effect on state:  e   e  Effect on operators: ee gg ii pp G. Morigi, E. Solano, B.-G. Englert, and H. Walther, Phys. Rev. A 65, (R) (2002)

Atoms and photons as qubits Two-level atoms ee gg Cavity with zero or one photon Measurement of atom: Measurement of field ionization

Information transfer and entanglement How to calibrate interaction time: apply potential between mirrors, taking through Stark effect atoms in and out of resonance with field mode Cavity mode: quantum databus

CNOT with cavity (not quite…)

TELEPORTATION Alice wants to transmit to Bob quantum state of system in her possession (example: photon polarization state). Alice and Bob share an entangled state: Alice has serious problems! Bennett et al, PRL (1993) Alice implements two binary measurements on her pair of spins and informs Bob, who applies appropriate transformations to his spin so as to reproduce original state Just two bits!

TELEPORTATION II Three qubits state: Alice measures her Bell states and informs Bob, who applies appropriate transformations to his qubit Just two bits!

DETECTION OF BELL STATES Hadamard gate: H Reversible: Production and analysis of Bell states

Teleportation with cavities L.D., N. Zagury, et al, PRA 50, R895 (1994) “Teleportation machine”

Recent implementation Zeilinger et al, Nature 430, 849 (2004)

Conclusions Cavity QED offers the possibility of exploring fundamental phenomena in quantum mechanics Realization of quantum gates, proposals for experiments on teleportation of quantum states Study of the dynamics of the decoherence process Direct measurement of the quantum state of the electromagnetic field, Heisenberg-limited measurements