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Quantum catalysis in cavity QED

A. de Oliveira Junior, Martí Perarnau-Llobet, Nicolas Brunner, Patryk Lipka-Bartosik

30/5/23 Published in : arXiv:2305.19324

Catalysis plays a key role in many scientific areas, most notably in chemistry and biology. Here we present a catalytic process in a paradigmatic quantum optics setup, namely the Jaynes-Cummings model, where an atom interacts with an optical cavity. The atom plays the role of the catalyst, and allows for the deterministic generation of non-classical light in the cavity. Considering a cavity prepared in a "classical'' coherent state, and choosing appropriately the atomic state and the interaction time, we obtain an evolution with the following properties. First, the state of the cavity has been modified, and now features non-classicality, as witnessed by sub-Poissonian statistics or Wigner negativity. Second, the process is catalytic, in the sense that the atom is deterministically returned to its initial state exactly, and could then in principle be re-used multiple times. We investigate the mechanism of this catalytic process, in particular highlighting the key role of correlations and quantum coherence.

Entire article

Phase I & II research project(s)

  • Quantum Systems

Phase III direction(s)

  • Quantum information and many body theory

Large N instantons from topological strings

Violation of the Finner inequality in the four-output triangle network

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