Investigating macroscopic quantum superpositions and the quantum-to-classical transition by optical parametric amplification
Francesco De Martini, and Fabio Sciarrino

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the creation and analysis of macroscopic quantum superpositions using optical parametric amplification, showing resilience to decoherence and exploring quantum entanglement at large scales.
Contribution
It introduces a resilient scheme for generating macroscopic quantum superpositions at room temperature via quantum injected optical parametric amplification, advancing quantum foundation studies.
Findings
Successfully created MQS with over 10^4 photons at room temperature.
Demonstrated bipartite Micro-Macro entanglement for up to 12 particles.
Revealed MQS interference patterns for large photon numbers.
Abstract
The present work reports on an extended research endeavor focused on the theoretical and experimental realization of a macroscopic quantum superposition (MQS) made up with photons. As it is well known, this intriguing, fundamental quantum condition is at the core of a famous argument conceived by Erwin Schroedinger, back in 1935. The main experimental challenge to the actual realization of this object resides generally on the unavoidable and uncontrolled interactions with the environment, i.e. the decoherence leading to the cancellation of any evidence of the quantum features associated with the macroscopic system. The present scheme is based on a nonlinear process, the "quantum injected optical parametric amplification", that maps by a linearized cloning process the quantum coherence of a single - particle state, i.e. a Micro - qubit, into a Macro - qubit, consisting in a large number…
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