Decoherence of matter waves by thermal emission of radiation

Author(s)
Lucia Hackermüller, Klaus Hornberger, Björn Brezger, Anton Zeilinger, Markus Arndt
Abstract

Emergent quantum technologies have led to increasing interest in decoherence-the processes that limit the appearance of quantum effects and turn them into classical phenomena. One important cause of decoherence is the interaction of a quantum system with its environment, which 'entangles' the two and distributes the quantum coherence over so many degrees of freedom as to render it unobservable. Decoherence theory has been complemented by experiments using matter waves coupled to external photons or molecules, and by investigations using coherent photon states, trapped ions and electron interferometers. Large molecules are particularly suitable for the investigation of the quantum-classical transition because they can store much energy in numerous internal degrees of freedom; the internal energy can be converted into thermal radiation and thus induce decoherence. Here we report matter wave interferometer experiments in which C70 molecules lose their quantum behaviour by thermal emission of radiation. We find good quantitative agreement between our experimental observations and microscopic decoherence theory. Decoherence by emission of thermal radiation is a general mechanism that should be relevant to all macroscopic bodies.

Organisation(s)
External organisation(s)
Universität Konstanz
Journal
Nature
Volume
427
Pages
711-714
No. of pages
4
ISSN
0028-0836
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature02276
Publication date
2004
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
103026 Quantum optics
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/2c5ec7ae-ea83-4c88-9f32-e43a441711d5