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![]() by Staff Writers Zurich, Switzerland (SPX) Aug 30, 2022
Physicists at ETH Zurich demonstrate how atoms can be pumped through a synthetic crystal without having to apply external periodic driving. These experiments combine several key aspects of quantum many-body physics in unexpected ways, thus paving a novel path to understanding and creating exotic states of quantum matter. Pumps, in a nutshell, are devices that use cyclic motion to attain the steady transport of some cargo. In a bicycle pump, the repeated up and down strokes of a piston create air flow. In an Archimedean screw pump, water is transferred between reservoirs by turning a crank. Related concepts have been explored as well in quantum systems, in particular for transporting electrons one by one through solid-state materials, thereby generating a quantised current. Now, a team led by Dr. Tobias Donner, a Senior Scientist in the group of Prof. Tilman Esslinger in the Department of Physics at ETH Zurich, adds a surprising twist to the story. Writing in Nature, they report a quantum pump that does not require any periodic driving from the outside - a pump winding without the crank.
The search for new puzzles A key ingredient of their experiment is an optical cavity in which the synthetic crystal is formed. The cavity serves to mediate a coupling between the atoms and the light fields involved. Moreover, photons leaking out of the cavity constitute a dissipation channel, over which the experimenters have excellent control as well. Such a system including dissipation is known as an open quantum system. Importantly, when suitably controlled, dissipation can be an asset rather than a nuisance: In 2019 members of the Esslinger group found that photons leaking from the cavity can couple different configurations of a synthetic crystal, giving rise to dynamics oscillating between these configurations.
Advancement by going in circles
Who turns the crank? These are exciting findings. Topology and open quantum systems are both highly active areas of modern physics. The connection between the two promises to provide not only a testbed for quantum many-body theory, but also a practical tool for realizing exotic states of quantum matter.
Research Report:Self-oscillating pump in a topological dissipative atom-cavity system
![]() ![]() Electron and nuclear spin qubits 2D array opens new frontier in quantum science West Lafayette IN (SPX) Aug 25, 2022 By using photons and electron spin qubits to control nuclear spins in a two-dimensional material, researchers at Purdue University have opened a new frontier in quantum science and technology, enabling applications like atomic-scale nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and to read and write quantum information with nuclear spins in 2D materials. As published Monday (Aug. 15) in Nature Materials, the research team used electron spin qubits as atomic-scale sensors, and also to effect the first e ... read more
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