Friday, October 12, 2012

Nobel Prize for quantum optics

The award of the 2012 Nobel Prize in Physics to Serge Haroche and David Wineland is the latest in a series of Nobel Prizes honoring elegant experiments using light to illuminate fundamental physics. The Swedish Academy of Sciences cited the two "for ground-breaking experimental methods that enable measuring and manipulation of individual quantum systems." By examining individual photons and atoms, they resolved big questions about quantum mechanics.

Physicists long wondered how seriously they should take the paradoxes that arise from applying quantum mechanics rigorously to the behavior of individual particles. Albert Einstein famously called the concept of entangled particles "spooky action at a distance," but recent experiments have shown that such entanglement is real, and can be used for quantum encryption. Other recent experiments have observed quantum behavior of individual particles, and manipulated that behavior so that quantum states can be superposed for purposes such as quantum computing.

Haroche and Wineland developed complementary techniques for quantum manipulation of single particles. Haroche pioneered cavity quantum electrodynamics, which studies how an electromagnetically resonant cavity can affect quantum properties of an atom contained inside it, including spontaneous and stimulated emission. Working with microwave and optical cavities, his group measured photon properties without destroying the quantum states. Wineland and his colleagues used light to trap ions in ways that allowed them to transfer and superpose states of an ion. They were able to create single-quantum "Schrödinger's cat" states in the laboratory and watch them change from a quantum superposition to a classical mixture. Their work has opened the door to quantum computing and new types of optical clocks. 

Haroche holds the chair in Quantum Physics at the CollĂ©ge de France (Paris, France), and is well-known for his research in quantum optics and quantum computing, and for his major contributions to cavity quantum electrodynamics, the behavior of atoms and light in high-Q cavities. He is work has earned him a long list of awards, including the Townes Award in 2007 from the Optical Society of America and the Herbert Walther Award from the German Physical Society and OSA in 2010. His deep roots in the optics community include doing his doctoral dissertation under Claude Cohen-Tannoudji and postdoctoral research under Arthur Schawlow, both future Nobel laureates. 

Wineland wrote his doctoral dissertation at Harvard University under Norman Ramsay, another Nobel Laureate, and heads the ion-storage group at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (Boulder, CO). He demonstrated the first laser cooling in 1978, and has used that technique to study quantum mechanics and develop applications. He demonstrated the first single-atom quantum logic gate in 1995, showing the potential of quantum computing, and later demonstrated entanglement of two and four ions. Other achievements include demonstrating quantum teleportation and a quantum logic atomic clock, which is now the world's most precise atomic clock. His long list of awards includes the Schawlow award in laser science from the American Physical Society, OSA's Frederick Ives award, and the first Herbert Walther award in 2008.

David Wineland has won the 2012 Nobel Prize in Physics, along with Serge Haroche. (Image courtesy of
Geoffrey Wheeler/NIST
)

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