‘Quantum Cats’ Made of Light
GAITHERSBURG, Md., Sept. 8, 2010 — "Quantum cats" made of photons have been created at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), boosting prospects for manipulating light in new ways to enhance precision measurements as well as computing and communications based on quantum physics.
NIST research associate Thomas Gerrits at the laser table used to create "quantum cats" made of light. (Image: NIST)
The NIST experiments repeatedly produced light pulses that each possessed two exactly opposite properties — specifically, opposite phases, as if the peaks of the light waves were superimposed on the troughs. Physicists call this an optical Schrödinger's cat. This quantum cat is the first to be made by detecting three photons at once and is one of the largest and most well-defined cat states ever made from light. (Larger cat states have been created in different systems by other research groups, including one at NIST.)
A "cat state" is a curiosity of the quantum world, where particles can exist in "superpositions" of two opposite properties simultaneously. Cat state is a reference to German physicist Erwin Schrödinger's famed 1935 theoretical notion of a cat that is both alive and dead simultaneously.
"This is a new state of light, predicted in quantum optics for a long time," said NIST research associate Thomas Gerrits, lead author of a paper on the work to be published in an upcoming issue of Physical Review A. "The technologies that enable us to get these really good results are ultrafast lasers, knowledge of the type of light needed to create the cat state, and photon detectors that can actually count individual photons."
The team created their optical cat state by using an ultrafast laser pulse to excite special crystals to create a form of light known as a squeezed vacuum, which contains only even numbers of photons. A specific number of photons were subtracted from the squeezed vacuum using a beamsplitter. The photons were identified with a NIST sensor that efficiently detects and counts individual photons (See Detector Counts Photons with 99% Efficiency https://www.photonics.com/Article.aspx?AID=42053).
These colorized plots of electric field values indicate how closely the "quantum cats" (left) compare with theoretical predictions for a cat state (right). The purple spots and alternating blue contrast regions in the center of the images indicate the light is in the appropriate quantum state. (Image: Gerrits/NIST)
Depending on the number of subtracted photons, Gerrits says, the remaining light is in a state that is a good approximation of a quantum cat — the best that can be achieved because nobody has been able to create a "real" one, by, for instance, the quantum equivalent to superimposing two weak laser beams with opposite phases.
NIST conducts research on novel states of light because they may enhance measurement techniques such as interferometry, used to measure distance based on the interference of two light beams. The research also may contribute to quantum computing — which may someday solve some problems that are intractable today — and quantum communications, the most secure method known for protecting the privacy of a communications channel. Larger quantum cats of light are needed for accurate information processing.
For more information, visit: www.nist.gov
Published: September 2010