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Spin squeezing of 10(11) atoms by prediction and retrodiction measurements 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 581 (7807) : 159-+
作者:  Lan, Jun;  Ge, Jiwan;  Yu, Jinfang;  Shan, Sisi;  Zhou, Huan;  Fan, Shilong;  Zhang, Qi;  Shi, Xuanling;  Wang, Qisheng;  Zhang, Linqi;  Wang, Xinquan
收藏  |  浏览/下载:7/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

The measurement sensitivity of quantum probes using N uncorrelated particles is restricted by the standard quantum limit(1), which is proportional to 1/root N. This limit, however, can be overcome by exploiting quantum entangled states, such as spin-squeezed states(2). Here we report the measurement-based generation of a quantum state that exceeds the standard quantum limit for probing the collective spin of 10(11) rubidium atoms contained in a macroscopic vapour cell. The state is prepared and verified by sequences of stroboscopic quantum non-demolition (QND) measurements. We then apply the theory of past quantum states(3,4) to obtain spin state information from the outcomes of both earlier and later QND measurements. Rather than establishing a physically squeezed state in the laboratory, the past quantum state represents the combined system information from these prediction and retrodiction measurements. This information is equivalent to a noise reduction of 5.6 decibels and a metrologically relevant squeezing of 4.5 decibels relative to the coherent spin state. The past quantum state yields tighter constraints on the spin component than those obtained by conventional QND measurements. Our measurement uses 1,000 times more atoms than previous squeezing experiments(5-10), with a corresponding angular variance of the squeezed collective spin of 4.6 x 10(-13) radians squared. Although this work is rooted in the foundational theory of quantum measurements, it may find practical use in quantum metrology and quantum parameter estimation, as we demonstrate by applying our protocol to quantum enhanced atomic magnetometry.


  
Spin-cooling of the motion of a trapped diamond 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020
作者:  Auer, Thomas O.;  Khallaf, Mohammed A.;  Silbering, Ana F.;  Zappia, Giovanna;  Ellis, Kaitlyn;  Alvarez-Ocana, Raquel;  Arguello, J. Roman;  Hansson, Bill S.;  Jefferis, Gregory S. X. E.;  Caron, Sophie J. C.;  Knaden, Markus;  Benton, Richard
收藏  |  浏览/下载:14/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Coupling the spins of many nitrogen-vacancy centres in a trapped diamond to its orientation produces a spin-dependent torque and spin-cooling of the motion of the diamond.


Observing and controlling macroscopic quantum systems has long been a driving force in quantum physics research. In particular, strong coupling between individual quantum systems and mechanical oscillators is being actively studied(1-3). Whereas both read-out of mechanical motion using coherent control of spin systems(4-9) and single-spin read-out using pristine oscillators have been demonstrated(10,11), temperature control of the motion of a macroscopic object using long-lived electronic spins has not been reported. Here we observe a spin-dependent torque and spin-cooling of the motion of a trapped microdiamond. Using a combination of microwave and laser excitation enables the spins of nitrogen-vacancy centres to act on the diamond orientation and to cool the diamond libration via a dynamical back-action. Furthermore, by driving the system in the nonlinear regime, we demonstrate bistability and self-sustained coherent oscillations stimulated by spin-mechanical coupling, which offers the prospect of spin-driven generation of non-classical states of motion. Such a levitating diamond-held in position by electric field gradients under vacuum-can operate as a '  compass'  with controlled dissipation and has potential use in high-precision torque sensing(12-14), emulation of the spin-boson problem(15) and probing of quantum phase transitions(16). In the single-spin limit(17) and using ultrapure nanoscale diamonds, it could allow quantum non-demolition read-out of the spin of nitrogen-vacancy centres at ambient conditions, deterministic entanglement between distant individual spins(18) and matter-wave interferometry(16,19,20).