
Science Resources RSS Feeds
|
 |
 |
 |
Quantum coherence possible in incommensurate electronic systems
November 03, 2006
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. - Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have demonstrated that quantum coherence is possible in electronic systems that are incommensurate, thereby removing one obstacle in the development of quantum devices. Electronic effects in thin films and at interfaces lie at the heart of modern solid-state electronic technology. As device dimensions shrink toward the nanoscale, quantum coherence and interference phenomena become increasingly important.
"At quantum dimensions, quantum mechanics says device components will couple together and act in a concerted manner, where everything affects everything else," said Tai-Chang Chiang, a professor of physics and a researcher at the university's Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory. "Most scientists assume that electronic layers must be commensurate, so electrons will flow without being diverted or scattered."
In fact, however, most material interfaces are incommensurate as a result of differences in crystal sizes, symmetries or atomic spacing. Random scattering of electrons was thought to destroy quantum coherence in such systems at the nanoscale.
Now, by studying electron fringe structure in silver films on highly doped silicon substrates, Chiang and his research group show that even when electronic layers are incommensurate, they can still be coherent. The researchers report their findings in the Nov. 3 issue of the journal Science.
In work performed at the Synchrotron Radiation Center at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, the researchers grew atomically uniform silver films on highly doped n-type silicon substrates. Then they used a technique called angle-resolved photoemission to examine the fine-structured electronic fringes.
Although the silver films and silicon substrates are lattice mismatched and incommensurate, the wave functions are compatible and can be matched over the interface plane, Chiang said. The resulting state is coherent throughout the entire system.
The fringes the scientists recorded correspond to electronic states extending over the silver film as a quantum well and reaching into the silicon substrate as a quantum slope, with the two parts coherently coupled through an incommensurate interface structure.
"An important conclusion drawn from the present study is that coherent wave function engineering, as is traditionally carried out in lattice-matched epitaxial systems, is possible for incommensurate systems," the researchers wrote, "which can substantially broaden the selection of materials useful for coherent device architecture."
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
|
 |
Related Quantum Coherence Current Events and Quantum Coherence News Articles Quantum Coherence Current Events and Quantum Coherence News RSS Dream of quantum computing closer to reality as mathematicians chase key breakthrough The ability to exploit the extraordinary properties of quantum mechanics in novel applications, such as a new generation of super-fast computers, has come closer following recent progress with some of the remaining underlying mathematical problems.
What happens when you pop a quantum balloon? When a tiny, quantum-scale, hypothetical balloon is popped in a vacuum, do the particles inside spread out all over the place as predicted by classical mechanics"
Physicists team up to learn how quantum mechanical states break down Researchers at the US Department of Energy's Ames Laboratory, the University of California, Santa Barbara, and Microsoft Station Q have made significant advancements in understanding a fundamental problem of quantum mechanics -- one that is blocking efforts to develop practical quantum computers with processing speeds far superior to conventional computers. Their respective theoretical and experimental studies investigate how microscopic objects lose their quantum-mechanical properties through interactions with the environment.
Discovery of 'hidden' quantum order improves prospects for quantum super computers An international team of scientists, including several at The Johns Hopkins University, has detected a hidden magnetic "quantum order" that extends over chains of nearly 100 atoms in a material that is otherwise magnetically disordered.
Protein enables discovery of quantum effect in photosynthesis When it comes to studying energy transfer in photosynthesis, it's good to think "outside the bun."
Quantum Secrets of Photosynthesis Revealed Through photosynthesis, green plants and cyanobacteria are able to transfer sunlight energy to molecular reaction centers for conversion into chemical energy with nearly 100-percent efficiency. More Quantum Coherence Current Events and Quantum Coherence News Articles
|
 |

|
Optical Coherence and Quantum Optics
by Leonard Mandel (Author), Emil Wolf (Author)
The advent of lasers in the 1960s led to the development of many new fields in optical physics. This book is a systematic treatment of one of these fields--the broad area that deals with the coherence and fluctuation of light. The authors begin with a review of probability theory and random processes, and follow this with a thorough discussion of optical coherence theory within the framework of classical optics. They next treat the theory of photoelectric detection of light and photoelectric correlation. They then discuss in some detail quantum systems and effects. The book closes with two chapters devoted to laser theory and one on the quantum theory of nonlinear optics. The sound introduction to coherence theory and the quantum nature of light and the chapter-end exercises will...
|

|
Quantum Superposition: Counterintuitive Consequences of Coherence, Entanglement, and Interference (The Frontiers Collection)
by Mark P. Silverman (Author)
Coherence, entanglement, and interference arise from quantum superposition, the most distinctive and puzzling feature of quantum physics. Silverman, whose extensive experimental and theoretical work has helped elucidate these processes, presents a clear and engaging discussion of the role of quantum superposition in diverse quantum phenomena such as the wavelike nature of particle propagation, indistinguishability of identical particles, nonlocal interactions of correlated particles, topological effects of magnetic fields, and chiral asymmetry in nature. He also examines how macroscopic quantum coherence may be able to extricate physics from its most challenging quandary, the collapse of a massive degenerate star to a singularity in space in which the laws of physics break down. ...
|

|
Quantum Interference and Coherence: Theory and Experiments (Springer Series in Optical Sciences)
by Zbigniew Ficek (Author), Stuart Swain (Author)
This book brings together and discusses for the first time detailed analyses of the experiments with trapped ions, experiments on quantum beats, coherent population trapping, electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT), electromagnetically induced absorption, creation of dark-states polaritons, subluminal and superluminal light, realization of a Fock state, and interference experiments in atom optics on atom grating, momentum distribution, and atom tunneling. This book is unique in many respects and will fill a gap in the literature.
|

|
Coherence and Quantum Optics VIII (No.8)
by N.P. Bigelow (Editor), J.H. Eberly (Editor), C.R. Stroud Jr. (Editor), I.A. Walmsley (Editor)
The Eighth Rochester Conference on Coherence and Quantum Optics was held on the campus of the University of Rochester during the period June 13-16, 2001. This volume contains the proceedings of the meeting. This Conference differed from the previous seven in the CQO series in several ways, the most important of which was the absence of Leonard Mandel. A special memorial symposium in his honor was held at the end of the conference. The presentations from that symposium are included in this proceedings volume. An innovation in this meeting was the inclusion of a series of invited lectures chaired by CQO founder Emil Wolf, reviewing the history of the fields of coherence and quantum optics before about 1970. These were given by three prominent participants in the development of the field, C....
|

|
Quantum Coherence and Decoherence (North-Holland Delta Series)
by K. Fujikawa (Author), Y.A. Ono (Author)
Just as in the pervious five symposia, the aim of this symposium was to link the recent advances in technology with fundamental problems in quantum mechanics. It provided a unique interdisciplinary forum where scientists with different backgrounds were given the opportunity to discuss basic problems of common interest in quantum science and technology from various aspects. This included not only an examination of the topic in terms of quantum optics and mesoscopic physics, but also in terms of the physics of precise measurement, macroscopic quantum phenomena, complex systems, and other fundamental problems in quantum physics. Two new important fields were also dealt with - the field of quantum computing, including quantum teleportation, quantum information, and cryptography, and the field...
|

|
Manipulating Quantum Coherence in Solid State Systems (NATO Science Series II: Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry)
by Michael E. Flatté (Editor), Ionel Tifrea (Editor)
The NATO Advanced Study Institute "Manipulating Quantum Coherence in Solid State Systems", in Cluj-Napoca, Romania, August 29-September 9, 2005, presented a fundamental introduction to solid-state approaches to achieving quantum computation. This proceedings volume describes the properties of quantum coherence in semiconductor spin-based systems and the behavior of quantum coherence in superconducting systems. Semiconductor spin-based approaches to quantum computation have made tremendous advances in the past several years. Coherent populations of spins can be oriented, manipulated and detected experimentally. Rapid progress has been made towards performing the same tasks on individual spins (nuclear, ionic, or electronic) with all-electrical means. Superconducting approaches to...
|

|
Quantum Coherence in Mesoscopic Systems (NATO Science Series B: Physics)
by B. Kramer (Editor)
|

|
Macroscopic Quantum Coherence and Quantum Computing
by Dmitri V. Averin (Editor), Berardo Ruggiero (Editor), Paolo Silvestrini (Editor)
This volume gives the historical and recent theoretical ground of the topic as well as detailed information on experimental results on the quantum behavior of macroscopic systems, together with some considerations on perspectives in the quantum computing area. Particular attention is given to the coherence effects in Josephson systems. The correlation with other atomic and molecular systems, exhibiting a macroscopic quantum coherence behavior is also discussed. Such proposals are considered for implementation of various schemes for coherent information processing and quantum computation.
|
|
|
Macroscopic Quantum Phenomena and Coherence in Superconducting Networks: Frascati, Italy 2-5 March 1995
by C. Giovannella (Editor), M. Tinkham (Editor)
This volume is a review of recent progress in the understanding of the physics of the superconducting arrays. Papers are arranged in five categories: from the single superconducting junctions to the Josephson junction array - an introduction to theory, meaningful experiments and technology; charging effects and phase transitions; static properties of classical JJ arrays; dynamics and coherence in classical JJ arrays; and toward JJ arrays applications. All the topical contributions go well beyond those characteristics of the condensed matter physics and offer links to the domains of the nonlinear science, complex systems and statistical mechanics.
|
|
|
Quantum Coherence and Reality: In Celebration of the 60th Birthday of Yakir Aharonov : International Conference on Fundamental Aspects of Quantum th
by Jeeva S. Anandan (Author), John L. Safko (Editor)
This volume constitutes the proceedings of an international conference on the fundamental aspects of quantum theory held in America in 1992, the aim of which was to celebrate the 60th birthday of Yakir Aharonov. Two Nobel Laureates (Norman Ramsey and Charles Townes), members of the National Academy of Sciences and Cresson Medal winners were among the speakers. Among the topics discussed were quantum reality, geometric phases and the Aharonov-Bohm effect, spin and statistics, black holes and quantum gravity. All of these are fundamental to the understanding of quantum theory and are related by being aspects of quantum theory on subjects that Yakir Aharonov has researched.
|
|