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Quantum Foundations
Super- and subradiance by entangled free particles
arXiv
Authors: Aviv Karnieli, Nicholas Rivera, Ady Arie, Ido Kaminer
Year
2020
Paper ID
6936
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
202
Citations
N/A
Abstract
When multiple quantum emitters radiate, their emission rate may be enhanced or suppressed due to collective interference in a process known as super- or subradiance. Such processes are well-known to occur also in light emission by free charged particles. To date, all experimental and theoretical studies of super- and subradiance in these systems involved the classical correlations between the emitters. However, dependence on quantum correlations, such as entanglement between different emitting particles, has not been studied. Recent advances in coherent-shaping of free-electron wavefunctions motivate the investigation of such quantum regimes of super- and subradiance. In this Letter, we show how a pair of coincident path-entangled electrons can demonstrate either super- or subradiant light emission, depending on the two-particle wavefunction. By choosing different free-electron Bell-states, the spectrum and emission pattern of the light can be reshaped, in a manner that cannot be accounted for by a classical mixed state. We show these results for light emission in any optical medium, and discuss their generalization to many-body quantum states. Our findings suggest that light emission can be sensitive to the explicit quantum state of the emitting matter wave, and possibly serve as a non-destructive measurement scheme for measuring the quantum state of many-body systems.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum Foundations research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2020 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- When multiple quantum emitters radiate, their emission rate may be enhanced or suppressed due to collective interference in a process known as super- or subradiance.
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