Various:
Andrew
Cleland,
John
Martinis, and colleagues at the University of California,
Santa Barbara, have provided the first clear demonstration that
the theory of quantum mechanics applies to the mechanical
motion of an object large enough to be seen by the naked eye.
Their work satisfies a longstanding goal among physicists.
Their paper, which
was
published in
Nature
today, describes the first demonstration of
a mechanical resonator that has been cooled to the quantum
ground state, the lowest level of vibration allowed by quantum
mechanics.With the mechanical resonator as close as possible to
being perfectly still, they added a single quantum of energy to
the resonator using a quantum bit (qubit) to produce the
excitation. The resonator responded precisely as predicted by
the theory of quantum mechanics."This is an important
validation of quantum theory, as well as a significant step
forward for nanomechanics research," said Cleland.The
researchers reached the ground state by designing and
constructing a microwave-frequency mechanical resonator that
operates similarly to—but at a higher frequency
than—the mechanical resonators found in many cellular
telephones. They wired the resonator to an electronic device
developed for quantum computation, a superconducting qubit, and
cooled the integrated device to temperatures near absolute
zero. Using the qubit as a quantum thermometer, the researchers
demonstrated that the mechanical resonator contained no extra
vibrations. In other words, it had been cooled to its quantum
ground state.The researchers demonstrated that, once cooled,
the mechanical resonator followed the laws of quantum
mechanics. They were able to create a single phonon, the
quantum of mechanical vibration, which is the smallest unit of
vibrational energy, and watch as this quantum of energy
exchanged between the mechanical resonator and the qubit. While
exchanging this energy, the qubit and resonator become "quantum
entangled," such that measuring the qubit forces the mechanical
resonator to "choose" the vibrational state in which it should
remain.In a related experiment, they placed the mechanical
resonator in a quantum superposition, a state in which it
simultaneously had zero and one quantum of excitation. This is
the energetic equivalent of an object being in two places at
the same time. The researchers showed that the resonator again
behaved as expected by quantum theory.
Related links
Quantum
ground state and single-phonon control of a mechanical
resonator Nature
Scientists
supersize quantum mechanics NatureNews
Quantum
mechanics: The surf is up Nature News and Views
Physicist
observe quantum properties in the world of objects
ScienceNews
Quivering
gizmo ushers in quantum machines ScienceNow
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© 2010 American Institute of Physics
Quantum properties in the mechanical world Free
18 March 2010
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1063/PT.5.024169
Content License:FreeView
EISSN:1945-0699
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