Limits of atomic entanglement by cavity-feedback : from weak to strong coupling
Krzysztof Pawlowski (LKB (Lhomond)), J\'er\^ome Est\`eve (LKB, (Lhomond)), Jakob Reichel (LKB (Lhomond)), Alice Sinatra (LKB (Lhomond))

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the generation of entangled atomic states via cavity feedback across different coupling regimes, identifying fundamental limits on spin squeezing and entanglement useful for quantum metrology.
Contribution
It provides a systematic theoretical study of cavity-feedback entanglement from weak to strong coupling, including decoherence effects, and derives ultimate squeezing limits.
Findings
Strong coupling yields long-lived, highly-entangled states.
Maximum spin squeezing is limited by spontaneous emission, independent of atom number.
Optimized parameters achieve fundamental squeezing limits for quantum metrology.
Abstract
We theoretically investigate the entangled states of an atomic ensemble that can be obtained via cavity-feedback, varying the atom-light coupling from weak to strong, and including a systematic treatment of decoherence. In the strong coupling regime for small atomic ensembles, the system is driven by cavity losses into a long-lived, highly-entangled many-body state that we characterize analytically. In the weak coupling regime for large ensembles, we find analytically the maximum spin squeezing that can be achieved by optimizing both the coupling and the atom number. This squeezing is fundamentally limited by spontaneous emission to a constant value, independent of the atom number. Harnessing entanglement in many-body systems is of fundamental interest [1] and is the key requirement for quantum enhanced technologies, in particular quantum metrology [2]. In this respect, many efforts…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Quantum optics and atomic interactions
