| Literature DB >> 27640348 |
Wen-Te Liao1,2, Christoph H Keitel1, Adriana Pálffy1.
Abstract
Heralded entanglement between macroscopical samples is an important resource for present quantum technology protocols, allowing quantum communication over large distances. In such protocols, optical photons are typically used as information and entanglement carriers between macroscopic quantum memories placed in remote locations. Here we investigate theoretically a new implementation which employs more robust x-ray quanta to generate heralded entanglement between two crystal-hosted macroscopical nuclear ensembles. Mössbauer nuclei in the two crystals interact collectively with an x-ray spontaneous parametric down conversion photon that generates heralded macroscopical entanglement with coherence times of approximately 100 ns at room temperature. The quantum phase between the entangled crystals can be conveniently manipulated by magnetic field rotations at the samples. The inherent long nuclear coherence times allow also for mechanical manipulations of the samples, for instance to check the stability of entanglement in the x-ray setup. Our results pave the way for first quantum communication protocols that use x-ray qubits.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27640348 PMCID: PMC5027545 DOI: 10.1038/srep33361
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Experimental parameters for demonstrated entanglement between macroscopic objects.
| Target | Temperature (K) | Coherence time | Distance | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nd3+ Y2SiO5 crystal | 3 | 7 ns | 1.3 cm | |
| 1012 Caesium atoms | 300 | 0.5 ms | few cm | |
| 105 Caesium atoms | <1 | 1 | 2.8 m | |
| Diamond crystal | 300 | 7 ps | 15 cm | |
| 57FeBO3 crystal | 300 | ≲141 ns | ~10 cm | this work |
The case of the 57FeBO3 crystal is under theoretical investigation in this work.
Figure 1Sketch of the creation of macroscopic entanglement.
(a) A combination of x-ray interferometry with NFS and an XPDC setup. X → X + EUV down-conversion in an antiparallel geometry occurs within a diamond crystal (yellow cuboid). Subsequently, a converted single x-ray signal photon enters an x-ray interferometer while a converted EUV idler photon reaches detector A producing a click. Beam splitter BS 1 transfers the signal photon into a two-path entanglement state. The photon is then coherently scattered off the two 57Fe crystals (green slabs). The nuclear transitions in the latter experience hyperfine splitting under the action of the applied magnetic fields BL and BR (blue short arrows). As the single photon is absorbed and shared by the two distant nuclear crystals, the latter are entangled in the state |ME〉 (1). The re-emitted signal photon from the nuclear crystals is in turn reflected by the mirror, recombined at beam splitter BS 2 and registered by either detector B or C. (b) 57Fe nuclear level structure. A linear polarized x-ray signal photon drives two Δm = 0 transitions (red solid arrows) with Zeeman-shifted frequencies ω ± Δ. The black dashed arrow depicts the unshifted transition frequency ω. (c,d) Dynamics of the coherence terms (rotating orange thick arrows) on the left and right arms of the interferometer induced by the time-dependent magnetic fields BL and BR (blue solid lines), respectively. BR is inverted at T. (e) Interference pattern Q at detectors B and C as a function of the magnetic phase ϕ(T) and magnetic switching time T. The light green downward arrow indicates the moment a click at detector A starts the chronometer for T.
Figure 2Decoherence caused by the vibration of entangled targets.
The corresponding amplitudes of random velocities u and u are (a) ±0.1 mm/s, (b) ±0.2 mm/s and (c) ±0.4 mm/s. The hyperfine splitting is ΔB = 30Γ.