Quantum droplets are small clusters of atoms self-bound by the balance of attractive and repulsive forces. Here we report on the observation of a novel type of droplets, solely stabilized by contact interactions in a mixture of two Bose-Einstein condensates. We demonstrate that they are several orders of magnitude more dilute than liquid helium by directly measuring their size and density via in situ imaging. Moreover, by comparison to a single-component condensate, we show that quantum many-body effects stabilize them against collapse. We observe that droplets require a minimum atom number to be stable. Below, quantum pressure drives a liquid-to-gas transition that we map out as a function of interaction strength. These ultra-dilute isotropic liquids remain weakly interacting and constitute an ideal platform to benchmark quantum many-body theories.Quantum fluids can be liquids -of fixed volume -or gases, depending on the attractive or repulsive character of the inter-particle interactions and their interplay with quantum pressure. Liquid helium is the prime example of quantum fluid. For small particle numbers it forms self-bound liquid droplets: nanometer-sized, dense and strongly interacting clusters of helium atoms. Understanding their properties, which directly reflect their quantum nature, is challenging and requires a good knowledge of the short-range details of the interatomic potential [1,2]. Very different quantum droplets, more than 2 orders of magnitude larger and 8 orders of magnitude more dilute, have recently been proposed in ultracold atomic gases [3]. Interestingly, these ultra-dilute systems enable a much simpler microscopic description, while remaining in the weakly interacting regime. They are thus amenable to well controlled theoretical studies.The formation of quantum droplets requires a balance between attractive forces, which hold them together, and repulsive ones that stabilize them against collapse. In helium droplets, the repulsion is dominated by the electronic Pauli exclusion principle, which arises from quantum statistics. In contrast, in ultracold atomic droplets the repulsion stems from quantum fluctuations, which are a genuine quantum many-body effect. These can be revealed in systems with competing interactions, where mean-field forces of different origins almost completely cancel out and result in a small residual attraction. There, beyond mean-field effects remain sizeable even in the weakly interacting regime. To first order they lead to the Lee-Huang-Yang repulsive energy [4], comparable in strength to the residual mean-field attraction. Recently, ultracold atomic droplets have been realized in magnetic quantum gases with competing attractive dipolar and repulsive contact interactions [5][6][7][8][9][10]. In this case, the anisotropic character of the magnetic dipole-dipole force leads to the formation of filament-like self-bound droplets with highly anisotropic properties [9,11,12]. Given the generality of the stabilization mechanism, droplets should in fact also exist in si...
The big challenge in quantum computing is to realize scalable multi-qubit systems with cross-talk–free addressability and efficient coupling of arbitrarily selected qubits. Quantum networks promise a solution by integrating smaller qubit modules to a larger computing cluster. Such a distributed architecture, however, requires the capability to execute quantum-logic gates between distant qubits. Here we experimentally realize such a gate over a distance of 60 meters. We employ an ancillary photon that we successively reflect from two remote qubit modules, followed by a heralding photon detection, which triggers a final qubit rotation. We use the gate for remote entanglement creation of all four Bell states. Our nonlocal quantum-logic gate could be extended both to multiple qubits and many modules for a tailor-made multi-qubit computing register.
The central technological appeal of quantum science resides in exploiting quantum effects, such as entanglement, for a variety of applications, including computing, communication and sensing1. The overarching challenge in these fields is to address, control and protect systems of many qubits against decoherence2. Against this backdrop, optical photons, naturally robust and easy to manipulate, represent ideal qubit carriers. However, the most successful technique so far for creating photonic entanglement3 is inherently probabilistic and, therefore, subject to severe scalability limitations. Here we report the implementation of a deterministic protocol4–6 for the creation of photonic entanglement with a single memory atom in a cavity7. We interleave controlled single-photon emissions with tailored atomic qubit rotations to efficiently grow Greenberger–Horne–Zeilinger (GHZ) states8 of up to 14 photons and linear cluster states9 of up to 12 photons with a fidelity lower bounded by 76(6)% and 56(4)%, respectively. Thanks to a source-to-detection efficiency of 43.18(7)% per photon, we measure these large states about once every minute, which is orders of magnitude faster than in any previous experiment3,10–13. In the future, this rate could be increased even further, the scheme could be extended to two atoms in a cavity14,15 or several sources could be quantum mechanically coupled16, to generate higher-dimensional cluster states17. Overcoming the limitations encountered by probabilistic schemes for photonic entanglement generation, our results may offer a way towards scalable measurement-based quantum computation18,19 and communication20,21.
Quantum teleportation enables the deterministic exchange of qubits via lossy channels. While it is commonly believed that unconditional teleportation requires a preshared entangled qubit pair, here we demonstrate a protocol that is in principle unconditional and requires only a single photon as an ex-ante prepared resource. The photon successively interacts, first, with the receiver and then with the sender qubit memory. Its detection, followed by classical communication, heralds a successful teleportation. We teleport six mutually unbiased qubit states with average fidelity F = (88.3 ± 1.3)% at a rate of 6 Hz over 60 m.
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