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Quantum Correlations in Nuclear Spin Ensembles T. S. Mahesh Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Pune Quantum or Classical ? How to distinguish quantum and classical behavior? Leggett-Garg (1985) Sir Anthony James Leggett Uni. of Illinois at UC Prof. Anupam Garg Northwestern University, Chicago A. J. Leggett and A. Garg, PRL 54, 857 (1985) Macrorealism “A macroscopic object, which has available to it two or more macroscopically distinct states, is at any given time in a definite one of those states.” Non-invasive measurability “It is possible in principle to determine which of these states the system is in without any effect on the state itself or on the subsequent system dynamics.” Leggett-Garg (1985) Consider a dynamic system with a dichotomic quantity Q(t) Dichotomic : Q(t) = 1 at any given time Q1 Q2 Q3 ... t1 t2 t3 ... time A. J. Leggett and A. Garg, PRL 54, 857 (1985) PhD Thesis, Johannes Kofler, 2004 Two-Time Correlation Coefficient (TTCC) Q1 Q2 t=0 t Temporal correlation: Cij = Qi Q j = ... Q3 time 2t . . . 1 N N Q i (r) Q (r) j = pij+(+1) + pij(1) r=1 r over an ensemble Ensemble Time ensemble (sequential) Spatial ensemble (parallel) 1 Cij 1 Cij = 1 Perfectly correlated Cij =1 Perfectly anti-correlated Cij = 0 No correlation LG string with 3 measurements K3 = C12 + C23 C13 Q1 Q2 Q3 t=0 t 2t K3 = Q1Q2 + Q2Q3 Q1Q3 Consider: Q1Q2 + (Q2 Q1)Q3 If Q1 Q2 : 1 + 0 Q1 Q2 : 1 + (2) = 1 = 1 or 3 Q1Q2 + Q2Q3 Q1Q3 = 1 or 3 3 < Q1Q2 + Q2Q3 Q1Q3 < 1 K3 Macrorealism (classical) 3 K3 1 Leggett-Garg Inequality (LGI) time time TTCC of a spin ½ particle (a quantum coin) Consider : A spin ½ particle precessing about z Hamiltonian : H = ½ z Initial State : highly mixed state : 0 = ½ 1 + x ( ~ 10-5) Dichotomic observable: x eigenvalues 1 Q1 Q2 Q3 t=0 t 2t Time C12 = x(0)x(t) = x e-iHt x eiHt = x [xcos(t) + ysin(t)] C12 = cos(t) Similarly, C23 = cos(t) and C13 = cos(2t) Quantum States Violate LGI: K3 with Spin ½ Q1 Q2 Q3 t=0 t 2t time K3 = C12 + C23 C13 = 2cos(t) cos(2t) (/3,1.5) Maxima (1.5) @ cos(t) =1/2 Quantum !! K3 Macrorealism (classical) No violation ! 0 2 t 3 4 LG string with 4 measurements Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 t=0 t 2t 3t time K4 = C12 + C23 + C34 C14 or, K4 = Q1Q2 + Q2Q3 + Q3Q4 Q1Q4 Consider: Q1(Q2 Q4) + Q3(Q2 + Q4) If Q2 Q4 : 0 + (2) Q2 Q4 : (2) + K4 Macrorealism (classical) 0 Q1 Q2 + Q 2 Q3 + Q 3 Q4 Q1 Q4 2 K4 2 Leggett-Garg Inequality (LGI) time = 2 = 2 = 2 Quantum States Violate LGI: K4 with Spin ½ Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 t=0 t 2t 3t time K4 = C12 + C23 + C34 C14 = 3cos(t) cos(3t) (/4,22) Quantum !! Extrema (22) @ cos(2t) =0 K4 Macrorealism (classical) Quantum !! 0 (3/4,22) 2 t 3 4 LG string with M measurements Q1 Q2 ... QM t=0 t ... Mt Even,M=2L: time KM = C12 + C23 + + CM-1,M C1,M or, KM = Q1Q2 + Q2Q3 + + QM-1QM Q1QM (Q1 + Q3)Q2 + (Q3+ Q5)Q4 + + (Q2L-3 + Q2L-1)Q2L-2+ (Q2L-1 Q1)Q2L Max: all +1 2(L1)+0. M2 Min: odds +1, evens –1 2(L1)+0. M+2 Odd,M=2L+1: (Q1 + Q3)Q2 + (Q3+ Q5)Q4 + + (Q2L-3 + Q2L-1)Q2L-2+ (Q2L-1 +Q2L+1)Q2L Q1Q2L+1 Max: all +1 2L–1. M2 Macrorealism (classical) Min: odds +1, evens –1 2L1. M KM M+2 KM (M2) M KM (M2) if M is even, if M is odd. M Quantum States Violate LGI: KM with Spin ½ Q1 Q2 ... QM t=0 t ... Mt time KM = C12 + C23 + + CM-1,M C1,M = (M-1)cos(t) cos{(M-1)t)} Maximum: Mcos(/M) @ t = /M Macrorealism (classical) Note that for large M: Quantum Mcos(/M) M > M-2 KM Macrorealism is always violated !! M 2 t 3 4 Evaluating K3 K3 = C12 + C23 C13 Hamiltonian : H = ½ z ENSEMBLE 0 ENSEMBLE 0 ENSEMBLE 0 x ↗ x ↗ x ↗ x ↗ t=0 t x(0)x(t) = C12 x ↗ x(t)x(2t) = C23 x ↗ x(0)x(2t) = C13 2t time Evaluating K4 K4 = C12 + C23 + C34 C14 Joint Expectation Value Hamiltonian : H = ½ z ENSEMBLE 0 ENSEMBLE 0 ENSEMBLE 0 ENSEMBLE 0 x ↗ x ↗ x ↗ x(0)x(t) x ↗ x ↗ x ↗ t=0 t 2t = C12 x(t)x(2t) = C23 x ↗ x(2t)x(3t) = C34 x ↗ x(0)x(3t) 3t time = C14 Moussa Protocol Joint Expectation Value Dichotomic observables Target qubit (T) A ↗ Probe qubit (P) |+ Target qubit (T) B ↗ A A x ↗ AB x ↗ AB B (1- )I/2+|++| Target qubit (T) AB B O. Moussa et al, PRL,104, 160501 (2010) Moussa Protocol Probe qubit (P) |+ Target qubit (T) Dichotomic observable be, A = P P x ↗ A (projectors) Let| be eigenvectors and 1 be eigenvalues of X Then, X=|++|||, and X1 = p(+1) p(1). Apply on the joint system: UA = |00|P1T + |11|P A p(1) = ||1 = tr [ {UA {|++|} UA†} {||1}] = P A = P+ P = p(+1) p(1) = X1 Extension: Probe qubit (P) |+ Target qubit (T) A B x ↗ AB A Sample 13CHCl 3 (in DMSO) Target: Resonance Offset: Ensemble of ~1018 molecules 13C Probe: 1H 100 Hz 0 Hz T1 (IR) 5.5 s 4.1 s T2 (CPMG) 0.8 s 4.0 s Experiment – pulse sequence 0 = Ax Aref 1H Ax(t)+i Ay(t) 13C = V. Athalye, S. S. Roy, and T. S. Mahesh, Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 130402 (2011). Ax(t) = x(t) Aref = x(0) Experiment – Evaluating K3 Q1 Q2 Q3 t=0 t 2t time K3 = C12 + C23 C13 = 2cos(t) cos(2t) Error estimate: 0.05 V. Athalye, S. S. Roy, and T. S. Mahesh, Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 130402 (2011). t ( = 2100) Experiment – Evaluating K3 50 100 t (ms) 150 200 LGI satisfied (Macrorealistic) LGI violated !! (Quantum) 165 ms Decay constant of K3 = 288 ms V. Athalye, S. S. Roy, and T. S. Mahesh, Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 130402 (2011). 250 300 Experiment – Evaluating K4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 t=0 t 2t 3t time K4 = C12 + C23 + C34 C14 = 3cos(t) cos(3t) Error estimate: 0.05 Decay constant of K4 = 324 ms V. Athalye, S. S. Roy, and T. S. Mahesh, Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 130402 (2011). ( = 2100) t Quantum to Classical 13-C signal of chloroform in liquid Signal x |1 |1 |0 time | = c0|0 + c1|1 s = |c0|2 c0c1* |c0|2 c0*c1 |c1|2 eG(t) c0*c1 Quantum State |0 eG(t) c0c1* |c1|2 |c0|2 0 0 |c1|2 Classical State NMR implementation of a Quantum Delayed-Choice Experiment Soumya Singha Roy, Abhishek Shukla, and T. S. Mahesh Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, (IISER) Pune Wave nature of particles !! C. Jönsson , Tübingen, Germany, 1961 Single Particle at a time Intensity so low that only one electron at a time • Not a wave of particles 4000 clicks • Single particles interfere with themselves !! C. Jönsson , Tübingen, Germany, 1961 Single particle interference • Two-slit wave packet collapsing • Eventually builds up pattern • Particle interferes with itself !! Which path ? • A classical particle would follow some single path • Can we say a quantum particle does, too? • Can we measure it going through one slit or another? Which path ? Movable wall; measure recoil Source Source No: Movement of slit washes out pattern Albert Einstein Crystal with inelastic collision No: Change in wavelength washes out pattern • Einstein proposed a few ways to measure which slit the particle went through without blocking it • Each time, Bohr showed how that measurement would wash out the wave function Niels Bohr Which path ? • Short answer: no, we can’t tell • Anything that blocks one slit washes out the interference pattern Bohr’s Complementarity principle (1933) Wave and particle natures are complementary !! Depending on the experimental setup one obtains either wave nature or particle nature Niels Bohr – not both at a time Mach-Zehnder Interferometer Open Setup D0 1 D1 Single photon BS1 0 Only one detector clicks at a time !! Mach-Zehnder Interferometer 0 ei 1 2 Open Setup 0 D0 1 D1 Single photon BS1 0 Trajectory can be assigned Mach-Zehnder Interferometer Open Setup D0 1 D1 0 ei 1 Single photon 2 BS1 0 Trajectory can be assigned 1 Mach-Zehnder Interferometer Open Setup D0 1 D1 Single photon BS1 0 Trajectory can be assigned : Particle nature !! Mach-Zehnder Interferometer Open Setup 0 ei 1 2 0 ei 1 2 0 ...... p(0) 1 / 2 1 ...... p(1) 1 / 2 S0 or S1 Intensities are independent of i.e., no interference Mach-Zehnder Interferometer Closed Setup D0 1 BS2 D1 Single photon BS1 0 Again only one detector clicks at a time !! Mach-Zehnder Interferometer 1 ei 0 1 1 ei 1 ei 0 1 2 2 2 p (0) cos2 ( / 2) 0 p (1) sin 2 ( / 2) 1 D0 BS2 0 ei 1 D1 2 Single photon BS1 0 Again only one detector clicks at a time !! Mach-Zehnder Interferometer Closed Setup Intensities are dependent of Interference !! S0 or S1 Mach-Zehnder Interferometer Closed Setup D0 1 BS2 D1 Single photon BS1 0 BS2 removes ‘which path’ information Trajectory can not be assigned : Wave nature !! Photon knows the setup ? D0 Open Setup 1 D1 Particle behavior BS1 0 D0 1 Closed Setup BS2 D1 Wave behavior BS1 0 Two schools of thought Bohr, Pauli, Dirac, …. Einstein, Bohm, …. • Intrinsic wave-particle duality • Apparent wave-particle duality • Reality depends on observation • Reality is independent of observation • Complementarity principle • Hidden variable theory Delayed Choice Experiment Wheeler’s Gedanken Experiment (1978) D0 1 BS2 D1 BS1 0 Delayed Choice BS2 Decision to place or not to place BS2 is made after photon has left BS1 Delayed Choice Experiment Wheeler’s Gedanken Experiment (1978) D0 1 BS2 D1 BS1 0 Delayed Choice BS2 Complementarity principle : Hidden-variable theory : Results do not change with Results should change with delayed choice the delayed choice No longer Gedanken Experiment (2007) No longer Gedanken Experiment (2007) COMPLEMENTARITY SATISFIED Delayed Choice Experiment Wheeler’s Gedanken Experiment (1978) Bohr, Pauli, Dirac, …. Einstein, Bohm, …. • Intrinsic wave-particle duality • Apparent wave-particle duality • Reality depends on observation • Reality is independent of observation • Complementarity principle • Hidden variable theory Complementarity principle : Hidden-variable theory : Results do not change with Results should change with delayed choice the delayed choice X Quantum Delayed Choice Experiment D0 1 BS2 D1 BS1 0 Superposition of present and absent !! Quantum Delayed Choice Experiment Open-setup 1 Closed setup D0 1 BS2 D1 BS1 0 e- BS2 D1 BS1 0 D0 e- Quantum Delayed Choice Experiment Open-setup 1 Quantum setup Closed setup BS1 BS2 D0 1 D1 BS1 0 BS1 0 0 e- BS2 D0 1 D1 e- e- D0 BS2 D1 Equivalent Quantum Circuits: Open MZI Closed MZI Wheeler’s delayed choice Quantum delayed choice Continuous Morphing b/w wave & particle |00 = 0 : Particle nature = /4 : Complete superposition = /2 : Wave nature Quantum Delayed Choice Experiment Interference No Interference Visibility : Open and Closed MZI Open and Closed MZI |p = |w Phys. Rev. A, 2012 Open and Closed MZI |p = 0.02 |w = 0.97 Phys. Rev. A, 2012 Quantum Delayed Choice Experiment = Phys. Rev. A, 2012 Quantum Delayed Choice Experiment Phys. Rev. A, 2012 Quantum Delayed Choice Experiment “Depending on the state of 13C spin, 1H spin can simultaneously exist in a superposition of particle-like to wave-like states !! Time to re-interpret Bohr’s complementarity principle? Phys. Rev. A, 2012