Experimental Snapshot Verification of non-Markovianity with Unknown
System-Probe Coupling
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2107.07876v1
- Date: Fri, 16 Jul 2021 13:05:23 GMT
- Title: Experimental Snapshot Verification of non-Markovianity with Unknown
System-Probe Coupling
- Authors: Henri Lyyra, Olli Siltanen, Jyrki Piilo, Subhashish Banerjee, and Tom
Kuusela
- Abstract summary: We apply the recently proposed quantum probing protocols with an unknown system-probe coupling to probe the convex coefficient.
By using two reference states instead of one as originally suggested, we are able to probe both lower and upper bounds for the convex coefficient.
We show how the protocol can identify Markovian and non-Markovian time intervals in the dynamics.
- Score: 0.058720142291102125
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
- Abstract: We apply the recently proposed quantum probing protocols with an unknown
system-probe coupling to probe the convex coefficients in mixtures of commuting
states. By using two reference states instead of one as originally suggested,
we are able to probe both lower and upper bounds for the convex coefficient. We
perform extensive analysis for the roles of the parameters characterizing the
double peaked Gaussian frequency spectrum in the Markovian-to-non-Markovian
transition of the polarization dynamics of a single photon. We apply the
probing of the convex coefficient to the transition-inducing frequency
parameter and show that the non-Markovianity of the polarization dynamics can
be confirmed with a single snapshot measurement of the polarization qubit
performed at unknown time and even with unknown coupling. We also show how the
protocol can identify Markovian and non-Markovian time intervals in the
dynamics. The results are validated with single photon experiments.
Related papers
- Temperature and non-Markovian parameter estimation in quantum Brownian motion [0.0]
We investigate a quantum metrological protocol operating in a non-Markovian environment by employing the quantum Brownian motion (QBM) model.
To confirm the presence of non-Markovian behavior, we apply two well-established non-Markovianity quantifiers.
Our results demonstrate that non-Markovianity and PM correlations can jointly be valuable resources to enhance metrological performance.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-04-11T13:41:00Z) - A Hybrid Measurement Scheme for Generating nonGaussian Spin States [0.0]
We present a protocol for generating nonclassical states of atomic spin ensembles.
We create a spin squeezed state by measuring the light's polarization rotation.
We detect single photons scattered into the signal mode.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-02-26T19:59:39Z) - Hidden exceptional point, localization-delocalization phase transition in Hermitian bosonic Kitaev model [0.0]
A Hermitian bosonic Kitaev model supports a non-Hermitian core matrix with exceptional points (EPs)
We show the connection between the hidden EP and the localization-delocalization transition in the equivalent systems.
Numerical simulations of the time evolution reveal a clear transition point at the EP.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-10-21T12:52:18Z) - Spectral Engineering of Cavity-Protected Polaritons in an Atomic
Ensemble with Controlled Disorder [0.0]
We observe the transition from a disordered regime to a polaritonic one with only two resonances.
We realize a dynamically modulated Tavis-Cumming model to produce a comb of narrow polariton resonances protected from the disorder.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-08-25T13:40:32Z) - Direct Measurement of Higher-Order Nonlinear Polarization Squeezing [0.0]
We report on nonlinear squeezing effects of polarization states of light by harnessing the intrinsic correlations from a polarization-entangled light source and click-counting measurements.
To quantify quantum effects, theoretical bounds are derived for second- and higher-order moments of nonlinear Stokes operators.
Our data certify nonclassical correlations with high statistical significance, without the need to correct for experimental imperfections and limitations.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-04-14T16:26:43Z) - Quantum asymmetry and noisy multi-mode interferometry [55.41644538483948]
Quantum asymmetry is a physical resource which coincides with the amount of coherence between the eigenspaces of a generator.
We show that the asymmetry may emphincrease as a result of a emphdecrease of coherence inside a degenerate subspace.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-07-23T07:30:57Z) - Two-photon resonance fluorescence of two interacting non-identical
quantum emitters [77.34726150561087]
We study a system of two interacting, non-indentical quantum emitters driven by a coherent field.
We show that the features imprinted by the two-photon dynamics into the spectrum of resonance fluorescence are particularly sensitive to changes in the distance between emitters.
This can be exploited for applications such as superresolution imaging of point-like sources.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-06-04T16:13:01Z) - Tunable Anderson Localization of Dark States [146.2730735143614]
We experimentally study Anderson localization in a superconducting waveguide quantum electrodynamics system.
We observe an exponential suppression of the transmission coefficient in the vicinity of its subradiant dark modes.
The experiment opens the door to the study of various localization phenomena on a new platform.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-05-25T07:52:52Z) - Observation-dependent suppression and enhancement of two-photon
coincidences by tailored losses [68.8204255655161]
Hong-Ou-Mandel (HOM) effect can lead to a perfect suppression of two-particle coincidences between the output ports of a balanced beam splitter.
In this work, we demonstrate experimentally that the two-particle coincidence statistics of two bosons can instead be seamlessly tuned to substantial enhancement.
Our findings reveal a new approach to harnessing non-Hermitian settings for the manipulation of multi-particle quantum states.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-05-12T06:47:35Z) - Polarization-orbital angular momentum duality assisted entanglement
observation for indistinguishable photons [0.6524460254566905]
Duality in the entanglement of identical particles manifests that entanglement in only one variable can be revealed at a time.
We show polarization entanglement by sorting photons in even and odd OAM basis, while sorting them in two polarization modes reveals the OAM entanglement.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-04-23T18:58:33Z) - Assessment of weak-coupling approximations on a driven two-level system
under dissipation [58.720142291102135]
We study a driven qubit through the numerically exact and non-perturbative method known as the Liouville-von equation with dissipation.
We propose a metric that may be used in experiments to map the regime of validity of the Lindblad equation in predicting the steady state of the driven qubit.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-11-11T22:45:57Z) - Frequency-resolved photon correlations in cavity optomechanics [58.720142291102135]
We analyze the frequency-resolved correlations of the photons being emitted from an optomechanical system.
We discuss how the time-delayed correlations can reveal information about the dynamics of the system.
This enriched understanding of the system can trigger new experiments to probe nonlinear phenomena in optomechanics.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-09-14T06:17:36Z) - Full-polaron master equation approach to dynamical steady states of a
driven two-level system beyond the weak system-environment coupling [1.7188280334580193]
We apply a full-polaron master equation and a weak-coupling non-Markovian master equation to describe the steady-state properties of a driven two-level system.
Our full-polaron equation approach does not require the special renormalization scheme employed in their weak-coupling theoretical method.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-07-17T17:21:01Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.