While there is a rigorously proven relationship about uncertainties intrinsic to any quantum system, often referred to as "Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle," Heisenberg originally formulated his ideas in terms of a relationship between the precision of a measurement and the disturbance it must create. Although this latter relationship is not rigorously proven, it is commonly believed (and taught) as an aspect of the broader uncertainty principle. Here, we experimentally observe a violation of Heisenberg's "measurement-disturbance relationship", using weak measurements to characterize a quantum system before and after it interacts with a measurement apparatus. Our experiment implements a 2010 proposal of Lund and Wiseman to confirm a revised measurementdisturbance relationship derived by Ozawa in 2003. Its results have broad implications for the foundations of quantum mechanics and for practical issues in quantum mechanics.The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle is one of the cornerstones of quantum mechanics. In his original paper on the subject, Heisenberg wrote "At the instant of time when the position is determined, that is, at the instant when the photon is scattered by the electron, the electron undergoes a discontinuous change in momentum. This change is the greater the smaller the wavelength of the light employed, i.e., the more exact the determination of the position" [1]. Here Heisenberg was following Einstein's example and attempting to base a new physical theory only on observable quantities, that is, on the results of measurements. The modern version of the uncertainty principle proved in our textbooks today, however, deals not with the precision of a measurement and the disturbance it introduces, but with the intrinsic uncertainty any quantum state must possess, regardless of what measurement (if any) is performed [2][3][4]. These two readings of the uncertainty principle are typically taught side-by-side, although only the modern one is given rigorous proof. It has been shown that the original formulation is not only less general than the modern one -it is in fact mathematically incorrect [5]. Recently, Ozawa proved a revised, universally valid, relationship between precision and disturbance [6], which was indirectly validated in [7]. Here, using tools developed for linear-optical quantum computing to implement a proposal due to Lund and Wiseman [8], we provide the first direct experimental characterization of the precision and disturbance arising from a measurement, violating Heisenberg's original relationship.In general, measuring one observable (such as position, q) will, according to quantum mechanics, induce a random disturbance in the complementary observable (in this case momentum, p). Heisenberg proposed, and it is widely believed, that the product of the measurement precision, (q), and the magnitude of the induced disturbance, η(p), must satisfy (q)η(p) ≈ h, where h is Planck's constant. This idea was at the crux of the FIG. 1. Schematic of the weak measurement proposal. a) A general meth...
Interest in the superconducting proximity effect has been reinvigorated recently by novel optoelectronic applications as well as by the possible emergence of the elusive majorana fermion at the interface between topological insulators and superconductors. Here we produce high-temperature superconductivity in Bi 2 se 3 and Bi 2 Te 3 via proximity to Bi 2 sr 2 CaCu 2 o 8 + δ , to access higher temperature and energy scales for this phenomenon. This was achieved by a new mechanical bonding technique that we developed, enabling the fabrication of highquality junctions between materials, unobtainable by conventional approaches. We observe proximity-induced superconductivity in Bi 2 se 3 and Bi 2 Te 3 persisting up to at least 80 K-a temperature an order of magnitude higher than any previous observations. moreover, the induced superconducting gap in our devices reaches values of 10 mV, significantly enhancing the relevant energy scales. our results open new directions for fundamental studies in condensed matter physics and enable a wide range of applications in spintronics and quantum computing.
We report the first experimental observations of two-photon emission from semiconductors, to the best of our knowledge, and develop a corresponding theory for the room-temperature process. Spontaneous two-photon emission is demonstrated in optically-pumped bulk GaAs and in electrically-driven GaInP/AlGaInP quantum wells.Singly-stimulated two-photon emission measurements demonstrate the theoretically predicted two-photon optical gain in semiconductors -a necessary ingredient for any realizations of future two-photon semiconductor lasers. Photon-coincidence experiment validates the simultaneity of the electrically-driven GaInP/AlGaInP two-photon emission, limited only by detector's temporal resolution.
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