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Thinking Inside The Box: some experimental measurements in quantum optics

Thinking Inside The Box: some experimental measurements in quantum optics. Aephraim M. Steinberg Centre for Q. Info. & Q. Control Institute for Optical Sciences Dept. of Physics, U. of Toronto. BEYOND workshop ( tomorrow , 2007). DRAMATIS PERSONÆ

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Thinking Inside The Box: some experimental measurements in quantum optics

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  1. Thinking Inside The Box: some experimental measurements in quantum optics Aephraim M. Steinberg Centre for Q. Info. & Q. Control Institute for Optical Sciences Dept. of Physics, U. of Toronto BEYOND workshop (tomorrow, 2007)

  2. DRAMATIS PERSONÆ Toronto quantum optics & cold atoms group: Postdocs: An-Ning Zhang( IQIS) Morgan Mitchell ( ICFO) (HIRING!) Matt Partlow(Energetiq)Marcelo Martinelli ( USP) Optics: Rob Adamson Kevin Resch(Wien UQIQC) Lynden(Krister) Shalm Jeff Lundeen (Oxford) Xingxing Xing Reza Mir (geophysics) Atoms: Jalani Fox (Imperial) Stefan Myrskog (BEC ECE) (SEARCHING!)Mirco Siercke ( ...?) Ana Jofre(NIST UNC) Samansa Maneshi Chris Ellenor Rockson Chang Chao Zhuang Xiaoxian Liu UG’s: Max Touzel, Ardavan Darabi, Nan Yang, Michael Sitwell, Eugen Friesen Some helpful theorists: Pete Turner, Michael Spanner, Howard Wiseman, János Bergou, Masoud Mohseni, John Sipe, Paul Brumer, ...

  3. Quantum Computer Scientists The 3 quantum computer scientists: see nothing (must avoid"collapse"!) hear nothing (same story) say nothing (if any one admits this thing is never going to work, that's theend of our funding!)

  4. OUTLINEMeasurement may mean many different things.... • {Forget about projection / von Neumann} • Bayes’s Thm approach to weak values • Thoughts on tunnelling • 3-box problem • joint weak values • Retrodiction paradoxes • Welcher Weg controversies • Using measurements for good rather than for evil (à la KLM) • Tomography in the presence of inaccessible information • The Wigner function of the triphoton

  5. 2 Can we talk about what goes on behind closed doors? (“Postselection” is the big new buzzword in QIP... but how should one describe post-selected states?)

  6. Conditional measurements(Aharonov, Albert, and Vaidman) Measurement of A AAV, PRL 60, 1351 ('88) Prepare a particle in |i> …try to "measure" some observable A… postselect the particle to be in |f> Does <A> depend more on i or f, or equally on both? Clever answer: both, as Schrödinger time-reversible. Conventional answer: i, because of collapse. Reconciliation: measure A "weakly." Poor resolution, but little disturbance. …. can be quite odd …

  7. A (von Neumann) Quantum Measurement of A Initial State of Pointer Final Pointer Readout Hint=gApx System-pointer coupling x x Well-resolved states System and pointer become entangled Decoherence / "collapse" Large back-action

  8. A Weak Measurement of A Initial State of Pointer Final Pointer Readout Hint=gApx System-pointer coupling x x Strong: Weak: Poor resolution on each shot. Negligible back-action (system & pointer separable)

  9. Bayesian Approach to Weak Values Note: this is the same result you get from actually performing the QM calculation (see A&V).

  10. Weak measurement & tunneling times

  11. Conditional probability distributions

  12. Conditional P(x) for tunneling

  13. What does this mean practically?

  14. How many ways are there to be in two places at one time? We all know even a quantum particle may not affect particles at spacelike separations. But even a classical cause may have two effects which are spacelike from each other. On the other hand, a classical particle may not have such effects. Neither would a single photon split into two paths of an interferometer. If, from an ensemble of particles, each affects only one region of spacetime, then the difference between the two will grow noisier. Perhaps the nonlocality of a tunneling particle is something deeper? AMS, in Causality and Locality in Modern Physics (Kluwer: 1998); quant-ph/9710046

  15. Of course, timing information must be erased AMS, Myrskog, Moon, Kim, Fox, & Kim, Ann. Phys. 7, 593 (1998); quant-ph/9810009

  16. 2 Quantum Let’s Make a Deal

  17. A+B A+B B+C Predicting the past... What are the odds that the particle was in a given box (e.g., box B)? It had to be in B, with 100% certainty.

  18. A + B = X+B+Y X Y B + C = X+B-Y Consider some redefinitions... In QM, there's no difference between a box and any other state (e.g., a superposition of boxes). What if A is really X + Y and C is really X - Y?

  19. X + B' = X+B+Y X Y X + C' = X+B-Y A redefinition of the redefinition... So: the very same logic leads us to conclude the particle was definitely in box X.

  20. A Gedankenexperiment... e- e- e- e-

  21. The 3-box problem: weak msmts PA = < |A><A| >wk = (1/3) / (1/3) = 1 PB = < |B><B| >wk = (1/3) / (1/3) = 1 PC = < |C><C|>wk = (-1/3) / (1/3) = -1. Prepare a particle in a symmetric superposition of three boxes: A+B+C. Look to find it in this other superposition: A+B-C. Ask: between preparation and detection, what was the probability that it was in A? B? C? Questions: were these postselected particles really all in A and all in B? can this negative "weak probability" be observed? [Aharonov & Vaidman, J. Phys. A 24, 2315 ('91)]

  22. The implementation – A 3-path interferometer(Resch et al., Phys Lett A 324, 125('04)) Diode Laser Spatial Filter: 25um PH, a 5cm and a 1” lens GP A l/2 BS1, PBS l/2 MS, fA GP B BS2, PBS BS3, 50/50 CCD Camera BS4, 50/50 GP C MS, fC l/2 Screen PD

  23. Use transverse position of each photon as pointer • Weak measurements can be performed by tilting a glass optical flat, where effective q Mode A Flat gt The pointer... cf. Ritchie et al., PRL 68, 1107 ('91). The position of each photon is uncertain to within the beam waist... a small shift does not provide any photon with distinguishing info. But after many photons arrive, the shift of the beam may be measured.

  24. A+B–C (neg. shift!) Rail C (pos. shift) Rails A and B (no shift) A negative weak value for Prob(C) Perform weak msmt on rail C. Post-select either A, B, C, or A+B–C. Compare "pointer states" (vertical profiles). K.J. Resch, J.S. Lundeen, and A.M. Steinberg, Phys. Lett. A 324, 125 (2004).

  25. Data for PA, PB, and PC... Rails A and B Rail C WEAK STRONG STRONG

  26. Is the particle "really" in 2 places at once? • If PA and PB are both 1, what is PAB? • For AAV’s approach, one would need an interaction of the form OR: STUDY CORRELATIONS OF PA & PB... - if PA and PB always move together, then the uncertainty in their difference never changes. - if PA and PB both move, but never together, then D(PA - PB) must increase.

  27. Practical Measurement of PAB Resch &Steinberg, PRL 92,130402 ('04) Use two pointers (the two transverse directions) and couple to both A and B; then use their correlations to draw conclusions about PAB. We have shown that the real part of PABW can be extracted from such correlation measurements:

  28. anticorrelated particle model exact calculation no correlations (PAB = 1) Non-repeatable data which happen to look the way we want them to...

  29. The joint probabilities

  30. And a final note... The result should have been obvious... |A><A| |B><B| = |A><A|B><B| is identically zero because A and B are orthogonal. Even in a weak-measurement sense, a particle can never be found in two orthogonal states at the same time. (So much for “serious” nonlocality of a tunneling particle as well...)

  31. 3 “Quantum Seeing in the Dark”

  32. " Quantum seeing in the dark " D C BS2 BS1 The bomb must be there... yet my photon never interacted with it. (AKA: “Interaction-free” measurement, aka “Vaidman’s bomb”) A. Elitzur, and L. Vaidman, Found. Phys. 23, 987 (1993) P.G. Kwiat, H. Weinfurter, and A. Zeilinger, Sci. Am. (Nov., 1996) Problem: Consider a collection of bombs so sensitive that a collision with any single particle (photon, electron, etc.) is guarranteed to trigger it. Suppose that certain of the bombs are defective, but differ in their behaviour in no way other than that they will not blow up when triggered. Is there any way to identify the working bombs (or some of them) without blowing them up? Bomb absent: Only detector C fires Bomb present: "boom!" 1/2 C 1/4 D 1/4

  33. Hardy's Paradox(for Elitzur-Vaidman “interaction-free measurements”) D+ D- C+ C- BS2+ BS2- I+ I- O- O+ W BS1+ BS1- e- e+ D+ –> e- was in D- –> e+ was in D+D- –> ? But … if they were both in, they should have annihilated!

  34. The two-photon switch...OR: Is SPDC really the time-reverse of SHG? (And if so, then why doesn't it exist in classical e&m?) The probability of 2 photons upconverting in a typical nonlinear crystal is roughly 10-10 (as is the probability of 1 photon spontaneously down-converting).

  35. Quantum Interference

  36. Suppression/Enhancementof Spontaneous Down-Conversion (57% visibility)

  37. Experimental Setup Det. V (D+) Det. H (D-) 50-50 BS2 CC PBS 50-50 BS1 PBS GaN Diode Laser (W) CC V H DC BS DC BS Switch

  38. Using a “photon switch” to implement Hardy’s Paradox H Pol DC V Pol DC 407 nm Pump

  39. But what can we say about where the particles were or weren't, once D+ & D– fire? 0 1 1 -1 In fact, this is precisely what Aharonov et al.’s weak measurement formalism predicts for any sufficiently gentle attempt to “observe” these probabilities...

  40. Weak Measurements in Hardy’s Paradox Y. Aharonov, A. Botero, S. Popescu, B. Reznik, J. Tollaksen, PLA 301, 130 (2002); quant-ph/0104062 Det. V (D+) Det. H (D-) Pol. BS2+ N(O+) /2 BS2- N(O) N(I+) /2 N(I-)

  41. Weak Measurements in Hardy’s Paradox Experimental Weak Values (“Probabilities”?) N(I-) N(O) N(I+) 0.243±0.068 0.663±0.083 0.882±0.015 N(O+) 0.721±0.074 -0.758±0.083 0.087±0.021 0.925±0.024 -0.039±0.023 Ideal Weak Values

  42. 4 The Bohr-Einstein (and Scully-Walls) Debates...

  43. Which-path controversy(Scully, Englert, Walther vs the world?) [Reza Mir et al., submitted to {everywhere} – work with H. Wiseman] Which-path measurements destroy interference. This is usually explained via measurement backaction & HUP. Suppose we use a microscopic pointer. Is this really irreversible, as Bohr would have all measurements? Need it disturb momentum? Which is «more fundamental» – uncertainty or complementarity?

  44. Which-path measurements destroy interference (modify p-distrib!) • The momentum distribution clearly changes • Scully et al prove there is no momentum kick • Walls et al prove there must be some Dp > h/a. • Obviously, different measurements and/or definitions. • Is it possible to directly measure the momentum transfer? • (for two-slit wavefunctions, not for momentum eigenstates!)

  45. Weak measurements to the rescue! To find the probability of a given momentum transfer, measure the weak probability of each possible initial momentum, conditioned on the final momentum observed at the screen... Wiseman, PLA 311, 285 (2003)

  46. Convoluted implementation... Glass plate in focal plane measures P(pi) weakly (shifting photons along y) Half-half-waveplate in image plane measures path strongly CCD in Fourier plane measures <y> for each position x; this determines <P(pi)>wk for each final momentum pf.

  47. A few distributions P(pi | pf) EXPERIMENT THEORY (finite width due to finite width of measuring plate) Note: not delta-functions; i.e., momentum may have changed. Of course, these "probabilities" aren't always positive, etc etc...

  48. The distribution of the integrated momentum-transfer EXPERIMENT Note: the distribution extends well beyond h/d. On the other hand, all its moments are (at least in theory, so far) 0. The former fact agrees with Walls et al; the latter with Scully et al. For weak distributions, they may be reconciled because the distri- butions may take negative values in weak measurement. THEORY

  49. 5 Measurement as a tool: Post-selective operations for the construction of novel (and possibly useful) entangled states...

  50. Highly number-entangled states("low-noon" experiment). Theory: H. Lee et al., Phys. Rev. A 65, 030101 (2002); J. Fiurásek, Phys. Rev. A 65, 053818 (2002) ˘ + = A "noon" state A really odd beast: one 0o photon, one 120o photon, and one 240o photon... but of course, you can't tell them apart... M.W. Mitchell et al., Nature 429, 161 (2004) States such as |n,0> + |0,n> ("noon" states) have been proposed for high-resolution interferometry – related to "spin-squeezed" states. Important factorisation:

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