Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin - Mathematisch-Naturwissen­schaft­liche Fakultät - Institut für Physik

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Mathematisch-Naturwissen­schaft­liche Fakultät | Institut für Physik | Kolloquium | Termine der Arbeitsgruppen | 06.02.2014 Berliner Physikalisches Kolloquium : Prof. Dr. Serge Haroche, Nobelpreis 2012, Collège de France & Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, France

06.02.2014 Berliner Physikalisches Kolloquium : Prof. Dr. Serge Haroche, Nobelpreis 2012, Collège de France & Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, France

Vortrag zum Thema: "Manipulating photons non-destructively and taming Schroedinger cats of light"
  • Wann 06.02.2014 von 18:30 bis 20:00
  • Wo Audimax, Unter den Linden 6, 10117 Berlin
  • iCal

Abstract:

We know since Einstein seminal paper of 1905 on the photoelectric effect that light, known since Maxwell to be an electromagnetic wave, is also made of discrete quanta, the photons. This strange wave-particle dualism has opened the way to the quantum theory and revolutionized physics. When they discussed the counter-intuitive quantum concepts, the fathers of the theory - Einstein, Bohr and Schroedinger among them - used to describe thought experiments in which they imagined that they freely manipulated photons, electrons or atoms and observed their strange behaviour. At the same time, they believed that these ideal experiments would be forever impossible to turn into actual ones in the laboratory. A major difficulty to realize these experiments with photons is that they are very fragile particles, usually destroyed upon detection. Technological advances have recently changed this state of affairs and made it possible to manipulate photons in ways which were previously thought impossible. I will describe this adventure and show how we have built a "photon box" in which we can count light quanta without destroying them, as we can do with marbles in a bag. We have also "tailored" the light trapped in the box and generated laboratory versions of the famous Schrödinger cat which the Austrian physicist imagined to be suspended between life and death. In our case, the "cat" is made of photons instead of atoms and it is maintained "half-way" between two states which classical physicists would consider to be incompatible. By studying this strange behaviour, we get a deeper knowledge about the quantum laws and learn tricks that we hope to use one day for developing new technologies which could improve the precision of measurements, the secrecy of communications or the power of computer simulations.