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Quantum Interference 2 Claude Cohen-Tannoudji Scott Lectures Cambridge, March 9th 2011 Collège de France 1 Outline of lecture 2 1: Introduction. Matter waves 2: Coherence length 3: A few experiments demonstrating the wave nature of atoms 4: Atomic interferometers 4: Two examples of atomic interferometers 2 Waves associated with a matter particle 1924 Louis de Broglie waves dB = h / m v 1927 Experiments of Davisson and Germer Electron microscopy Diffraction of a beam of helium atoms by the surface of a NaCl crystal Estermann, Stern 1930 Diffraction and interference effects observed with neutrons - Structure and dynamics of various types of media - Interferometers using Bragg diffraction of neutrons by 3 slices cut in the same crystal. Development of new methods for making « components » allowing one to manipulate atomic de Broglie waves and to observe diffraction and interference effects with atoms. 3 Mirrors for atoms z Total reflection of a laser beam giving rise to an evanescent wave If the laser is detuned to the blue, the light shift is positive and creates a potential barrier U(z) near the surface If the total energy E of an atom falling on the surface is smaller then the height U0 of the barrier, the atom bounces on the surface R.J. Cook, R.K. Hill , 1982 4 Description of external variables Distribution of positions and momenta R( r ) = r ˆ r P( p) = p ˆ p r : width of R( r ) Dispersion of positions p : width of P( p) Dispersion of momenta Case where the state of the center of mass can be described by a wave function Pure case : ˆ = 2 2 2 2 R( r ) = r = r P( p) = p = p The functions (r ) = r and ( p) = p are Fourier transfoms of each other. Warning! 2 2 is not the F.T. of P( p) = p R(r ) = r () ( ) 5 Outline of lecture 2 1: Introduction. Matter waves 2: Coherence length 3: A few experiments demonstrating the wave nature of atoms 4: Atomic interferometers 4: Two examples of atomic interferometers 6 ˆ Spatial coherences: r r Non diagonal elements of between 2 different points in space. If corresponds to a pure case, * r ˆ r = r r = ( r ) ( r ) ˆ The argument of the complex number r r is equal to the difference of the phases of in r and r Global spatial coherence at a distance 3 G( a) = d r r ˆ r + a Sum of all spatial coherences between couples of points separated by a distance If ˆ = (pure case), * 3 3 G( a) = d r r r + a = d r ( r ) ( r + a) Overlap integral between the wave packet (r ) * and the wave packet (r ) tanslated by a 7 Connection between G( a)and P( p) 3 G( a) = d r r ˆ r + a = d r d p d p r p p ˆ p p r + a 3 r p p r + a = 1 / 2 exp i p p .r / exp i p.a / 3 1 / 2 d 3r exp i p p .r / = p p 3 G( a) = d p P( p) exp i p. a / 3 ( ) ( 3 ) 3 ( ( ) ) ( ( ( ) ) ) The global spatial coherence is the Fourier transform of the momentum distribution. Coherence length is the width of G( a) Do not confuse coherence length and spatial dispersion x! For a free particle, x depends on time (spreading of the wave packet) whereas p, and thus , are constants of the motion. 8 Optical analogy Time correlation function of an optical field G( ) = d t E(t)E * (t + ) Overlap integral of a wave packet with the wave packet translated in time by –. According to Wiener-Khinchine theorem, G() is the Fourier transform of the spectral density (). If the width of () is too small for allowing its accurate measurement with a spectrometer, it can be more convenient to measure G() by letting the wave trains interfere in a Michelson interferometer with the same wave trains retarded by an adjustable delay. One measures in this way G() and, by Fourier transform, (). Principle of Fourier spectroscopy. 9 Outline of lecture 2 1: Introduction. Matter waves 2: Coherence length 3: A few experiments demonstrating the wave nature of atoms 4: Atomic interferometers 4: Two examples of atomic interferometers 10 Young’s two slit experiment with atoms v , v, v Transverse collimation ensures v / v 1 resulting in an improved transverse coherence of the source The fringe period is dictated by the de Broglie wavelength dB 1 / v Number of fringes determined by v / v i.e. the longitudinal coherence of the source. This is why supersonic beams and laser cooled atoms are of interest : v / v 1 11 Interference fringes obtained with the de Broglie waves of a supersonic beam of metastable Helium atoms O. Carnal, J. Mlynek Phys. Rev. Lett. 66, 2689 (1991) 12 Interference fringes obtained with the de Broglie waves associated with metastable laser cooled Neon atoms Cloud of cold atoms F.Shimizu, K.Shimizu, H.Takuma Phys.Rev. A46, R17 (1992) 13 Experimental results Each atom gives rise to a localized impact on the detector The spatial repartition of the impacts is spatially modulated Wave-particle duality for atoms The wave associated with the atom allows one to calculate the probability to find the atom at a given point 14 Increasing the size of the interfering objects 15 Other examples of effects demonstrating the wave nature of atomic motion Frequency modulation of de Broglie waves - Reflection of atomic wave packets by a mirror for atoms (evanescent laser wave) vibrating at frequency . - Frequency modulation of the reflected waves giving rise to sidebands ± n (n=1,2,3…) in the energy spectrum of the atoms bouncing off the mirror. - Time of flight measurement of the energy spectrum A. M. Steane, P. Szriftgiser, P. Desbiolles, and J. Dalibard, Phys. Rev. Lett. 74, 4972 (1995) 16 Experimental results /2 0 950 KHz 880 KHz 800 KHz Pure quantum effect 17 Outline of lecture 2 1: Introduction. Matter waves 2: Coherence length 3: A few experiments demonstrating the wave nature of atoms 4: Atomic interferometers 4: Two examples of atomic interferometers 18 Beam splitter for atomic de Broglie waves A plane de Broglie wave corresponding to atoms in the ground state g with momentum p crosses at right angle a resonant laser beam The atom-laser interaction time, determined by the width of the laser beam, is chosen for producing a /2 pulse After the laser beam the incident de Broglie wave is transformed into a coherent linear superposition with equal weights of 2 de Broglie waves g, p and e, p+k e,p+k g,p g,p k tan = p C. Bordé, Phys. Lett. A 140, 10 (1989) If the interaction time corresponds to a pulse, the incident state g,p is transformed into e,p+k 19 Extension of Ramsey fringes to the optical domain Simplest idea: use 2 laser beams e,p+k z e,p+k Difficulty g,p e,p+k g,p The 2 final wave packets have the same momentum, the same internal state e, but are spatially displaced by an amount kT/m (T : flight time from one wave to the other) The velocity dispersion v along the z-axis gives rise to a coherence length = /m v and the 2 wave packets cannot interfere if kT / m = / m v v T 1 / k = / 2 A possible solution Add extra beams to recombine the 2 wave packets 20 Two examples of interferometers Mach-Zehnder interferometer Ramsey Bordé interferometer C. Bordé, C. Salomon, S. Avrillier, A. Van Lerberghe, C. Bréant, D. Bassi, S. Scolès, Phys.Rev A30,1836 (1984) 21 Atomic interferometry Input Output At the output of an atomic interferometer the wave function of the outgoing beam is a linear superposition of 2 wave functions corresponding to 2 possible paths which can be followed by atoms Can we calculate the phase shift between the 2 wave functions due to various causes (free propagation, laser, external or inertial fields)? The 2 possible paths are represented in the figure above by lines which suggest trajectories of the particles. These trajectories have no meaning in quantum mechanics. Can we express the phase shifts of the wave functions as integrals over classical trajectories? Using a Feynman path approach, one can show that this is possible in situations which are realized for most atomic interferometry experiments. We just give here the main results of this approach. 22 Quantum propagator K in space time ( ) K zbtb , z a ta = Probability amplitude for the particle to arrive in zb at time tb if it starts from z a at time ta Feynman has shown that K can be also written: K zbtb , z a ta = N exp i S / N : Normalization coefficient ( ) ( ) : Sum over all possible paths connecting z a ta to zbtb tb S : Action along the path : S = L z(t), z(t) d t ta L : Lagrangian If L is a quadratic function of z and z,one can show that the sum over reduces to a single term corresponding to the classical path z a ta zbtb for which the action, Scl is extremal ( ) { ( ) } K zbtb , z a ta = F(tb ,ta ) exp i Scl zbtb , z a ta / F(tb ,ta ) : independent of z a and zb For a review of Feynman’s approach applied to interferometry, see: P. Storey and C.C-T, J.Phys.II France, 4, 1999 (1994) 23 Expression of the phase shift i zbtb = d z a z a ta exp Scl zbtb , z a ,ta Analogy with Fresnel-Huygens principle (here in space-time) ( ) ( ) ( ) If Scl >> , and if the initial state of the particle at t = ta is a plane wave with momentum p0, the integral over za reduces to a single term z zb N p0 z0 cl M0 ta tb t M0 : Point of the plane t = ta such that the classical path M0 N has an initial momentum p0 in M0 ( ) { ( ) } ( ) ) } ( ) ( ) N M 0 exp i Scl N , M 0 / For an incident particle with momentum p0 , N is given by N M 0 exp i Scl N , M 0 / where Scl N , M 0 is the action along the classical trajectory M 0 N having a momentum p0 in M 0 The curves representing the paths I and II are classical trajectories used for calculating the phase shifts ( ) ( ) { ( 24 Two important remarks 1. The same Lagrangian must be used for calculating the classical trajectories and the classical action along these trajectories. If two different Lagrangians are used, the principle of least action is violated. The phase shift is not correct, so that the wave function no longer obeys Schrödinger equation. Quantum mechanics is violated. 2. The two classical lines representing the 2 paths in the interferometer cannot be determined by a measurement. In an interferometer, where a single atom can follow two different paths, trying to measure the path which is followed by the atom destroys the interference signal (wave-particle complementarity) 5.25 Outline of lecture 2 1: Introduction. Matter waves 2: Coherence length 3: A few experiments demonstrating the wave nature of atoms 4: Atomic interferometers 4: Two examples of atomic interferometers 26 Atom in a gravitational field Kasevich-Chu (KC) interferometer M. Kasevich, S. Chu P.R.L. 67, 181 (1991) The 2 interfering paths propagate at different heights. The phase shift is thus expected to depend on the gravitational acceleration g Quadratic Lagrangian L( z, z ) = m z2 / 2 mgz Feynman's approach z A0C0B0D0A0 Unperturbed paths (g = 0) Straight lines ACBDA Perturbed paths (g 0) Parabolas Free fall of atoms DD0=CC0=gT2/2 BB0=2gT2 0 T 2T t k D0C0 = T m 27 Calculation of the phase shift Propagation along the perturbed trajectories 1 prop = [ Scl (AC) + Scl (CB) Scl (AD) Scl (DB)] The classical action along a path joining za,ta to zb,tb can be exactly calculated m ( zb za ) mg mg 2 3 Scl ( za t a , zb tb ) = zb + za ) ( tb t a ) tb t a ) ( ( 24 2 tb t a 2 2 Using this equation, one finds prop = 0 Exact result Phase shift due to the interaction with the lasers Because of the free fall, the laser phases are imprinted on the atomic wave function, not in C0,D0,B0, but in C,B,D This phase shift is expected to scale as the free fall in units of the laser wavelength, i.e. as gT2/ , on the order of kgT2 Result of the calculation laser = kgT 2 The lasers act as rulers which measure the free fall of atoms 28 A recent proposed re-interpretation of this experiment H. Müller, A. Peters and S. Chu, Nature, 463, 926 (2010) The atom is considered as a clock ‘ticking” at the Compton frequency C / 2 = mc 2 / h 3.2 10 25 Hz The “atom-clock” propagates along the 2 arms of the interferometer at different heights and experiences different gravitational red shifts along the 2 paths leading to the phase shift measured by the interferometer In spite of the small difference of heights between the 2 paths, the huge value of C provides the best test of Einstein’s red shift We do not agree with this interpretation P. Wolf, L. Blanchet, C. Bordé, S. Reynaud, C. Salomon and C. Cohen-Tannoudji, Nature, 467, E1 (2010) See also a more detailed paper of the same authors, submitted to Class. Quant. Gravity and available at arXiv:1012.1194v1 [gr-qc] 29 Our arguments •The exact quantum calculation of the phase shift due to the propagation of the 2 matter waves along the 2 arms gives zero. The contributions of the term –mgz of L (red-shift) and mv2/2 (special relativistic shifts) cancel out. The contribution of the term mv2/2 cannot be determined and subtracted because measuring the trajectories of the atom in the interferometer is impossible. •The phase shift comes from the change, due to the free fall, of the phases imprinted by the lasers. The interferometer is thus a gravimeter measuring g and not the red shift. The value obtained for g is compared with the one measured with a falling corner cube •The interest of this experiment is to test that quantum objects, like atoms, fall with the same acceleration as classical objects, like corner cubes. It tests the universality of free fall. •If g is changed into g’=g(1+) to describe possible anomalies of the red shift, and if the same Lagrangian, which is still quadratic, is used in all calculations, the previous conclusions remain valid. The signal is not sensitive to the red shift. It measures the free fall in g’ 30 Comparison with real clocks •The red shift measurement uses 2 clocks A and B located at different heights and locked on the frequency of an atomic transition. The 2 measured frequencies A and B are exchanged and compared. •The 2 clocks are contained in devices (experimental set ups, rockets,..) that are classical and whose trajectories can be measured by radio or laser ranging. The atomic transition of A and B used as a frequency standard is described quantum mechanically but the motion of A and B in space can be described classically because we are not using an interference between two possible paths followed by the same atom •The motion of the 2 clocks can thus be precisely measured and the contribution of the special relativistic term can be evaluated and subtracted from the total frequency shift to get the red shift •In the atomic interferometer, we have a single atom whose wave function can follow 2 different paths, requiring a quantum description of atomic motion. The trajectory of the atom cannot be measured. Nowhere a frequency measurement is performed. 31 Tests of alternative theories Most alternative theories use a modified Lagrangian L with parameters describing corrections to –mgz due to non universal couplings between gravity and other fields (for example, electromagnetic and nuclear energies may have different couplings) If the same Lagrangian L is used in all calculations, our analysis can be extended to show that the Kasevich Chu (KC) interferometer measures the gravitational acceleration (test of UFF) whereas atomic clocks measure the red shift (test of UCR). Both tests are related because it is impossible to violate UFF without violating UCR (Schiff’s conjecture). They are however complementary because they are not sensitive to the same linear combinations of the i (atomic clock transitions are electromagnetic, but the Pound-Rebka experiment uses a nuclear transition.) If the trajectories are not calculated with the same Lagrangian L as the one used for calculating the phase shift in the KC interferometer, the phase shift could measure the red shift, but at the cost of a violation of quantum mechanics. A new consistent reformulation of the theory is then needed to explain how to calculate the phase shift 32 Atom in a rotating frame Ox yz : Galilean frame R Oxyz : Rotating frame R = ez 1 2 Free particle in R L = mv Lagrangian 2 v = v + r Relation between v and v Lagrangian L in R L(r, v) = L(r , v ) 1 1 2 1 2 L(r, v) = m v + r = mv + m. ( r v ) + m r 2 2 2 ( ) ( ) 2 Calculation of the phase shift Since the Lagrangian is quadratic, one can use Feynman’s approach leading to m rot = 2 S S : surface between the 2 arms of the interferometer Sagnac effect for matter waves 33 Comparison of the rotational phase shifts for atoms and for light atoms 2mS / mc 2 rot = = 1 light 2 2S L / c rot L L / 2 : frequency of light This result is true only if the 2 interferometers have the same surface. In fact, atomic gyrometers have a much smaller surface than laser interferometers. Furthermore, laser gyros use optical fibers which can make several turns and enclose a much larger surface First experimental observation of the Sagnac effect for atoms F. Riehle, Th. Kisters, A. Witte, J. Helmcke, C. Bordé P.R.L. 67, 177 (1991) Atomic gyros reach now a sensitivity of 6 x 10-10 rad/s for an integration time of 1s (the rotation speed of the earth is 7.3 x 10-5 rad/s) T. L. Gustavson, A. Landragin, and M. A. Kasevich, Class. Quantum Grav. 17, 2385 (2000). 34 Ramsey Bordé interferometers The phase shift between the 2 paths also depends on the difference of internal and external energies of the 2 states between the 2 lasers of each pair because this interferometer is not symmetric as the KC interferometer. The calculation of the phase shift is straightforward. One finds that the probability that the atom exits in e is given by: 1 1 P(e) = cos 2 L A R T R = k 2 / 2m 4 8 Another interferometer leading to an exit of the atom in e ( ) ( ) 1 1 P(e) = cos 2 L A + R T 4 8 35 Ramsey Bordé interferometers (continued) The probability that the system exits the interferometer in state e is thus given by 2 systems of Ramsey fringes centered in L=A+R and L=A-R. This interferometer can now be considered at a clock since it delivers a signal from which one can extract an atomic frequency A which is in the microwave or optical domain (not at Compton frequency!) To measure the red shift with such interferometers, one would need to build two of them, to put them at different heights and to compare the 2 values of A that they deliver Using this interferometer for measuring h/m and then From the 2 systems of Ramsey fringes, one can also extract R and then a better value of the ratio h/m. This improves the determination of the fine structure constant which can be written 2Ry mproton matome h 2 = c melectron mproton matome D. S. Weiss, B. C. Young, and S. Chu, Phys. Rev. Lett. 70, 2706 (1993). 36 Most recent measurement of by a variant of this method -1 = 137.035 999 037 (91) P. Bouchendira, P. Cladé, S. Guellati, F. Nez, F. Biraben PRL, 106, 080801 (2011) 37 Conclusion Young’s interference fringes may be observed with the de Broglie waves associated with atoms and large molecules Tests of quantum mechanics with mesoscopic systems Ramsey fringes can be observed in the optical domain using beam splitters based on the atomic recoil. Quantum interference using an interplay of internal and external atomic variables Atomic interferometers reach a very high sensitivity They are useful for - Basic studies (test of the universality of free fall, measurement of the fine structure constant) - For practical applications (gravimeters, gyrometers) In space, they could be used, in combination with atomic clocks, for testing the gravitational field at very large distances 38