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Quantum Chemistry
Correction of dephasing oscillations in matter wave interferometry
arXiv
Authors: Alexander Rembold, Georg Schütz, Wei-Tse Chang, André Stefanov, Andreas Pooch, Ing-Shouh Hwang, Andreas Günther, Alexander Stibor
Year
2013
Paper ID
31693
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
183
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Vibrations, electromagnetic oscillations and temperature drifts are among the main reasons for dephasing in matter-wave interferometry. Sophisticated interferometry experiments, e.g. with ions or heavy molecules, often require integration times of several minutes due to the low source intensity or the high velocity selection. Here we present a scheme to suppress the influence of such dephasing mechanisms - especially in the low-frequency regime - by analyzing temporal and spatial particle correlations available in modern detectors. Such correlations can reveal interference properties that would otherwise be washed out due to dephasing by external oscillating signals. The method is shown experimentally in a biprism electron interferometer where a perturbing oscillation is artificially introduced by a periodically varying magnetic field. We provide a full theoretical description of the particle correlations where the perturbing frequency and amplitude can be revealed from the disturbed interferogram. The original spatial fringe pattern without the perturbation can thereby be restored. The technique can be applied to lower the general noise requirements in matter-wave interferometers. It allows for the optimization of electromagnetic shielding and decreases the efforts for vibrational or temperature stabilization.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum Chemistry research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2013 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Vibrations, electromagnetic oscillations and temperature drifts are among the main reasons for dephasing in matter-wave interferometry.
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