Collapse in ultracold Bose Josephson junctions
Marco Bilardello, Andrea Trombettoni, Angelo Bassi

TL;DR
This paper explores how ultracold Bose Josephson junctions can be used to test and constrain wave function collapse models, especially the CSL model, by analyzing decoherence effects on macroscopic quantum states.
Contribution
It demonstrates that macroscopic quantum coherence suppression due to CSL increases exponentially with atom number, and discusses experimental setups to bound CSL parameters using ultracold atoms.
Findings
Suppression of coherence increases exponentially with atom number.
Magnetically trapped atoms are more suitable for testing CSL.
A NOON state with 1000 atoms can constrain CSL parameters.
Abstract
We investigate how ultracold atoms in double well potentials can be used to study and put bounds on models describing wave function collapse. We refer in particular to the continuous spontaneous localization (CSL) model, which is the most well studied among dynamical reduction models. It modifies the Schrodinger equation in order to include the collapse of the wave function in its dynamics. We consider Bose Josephson junctions, where ultracold bosons are trapped in a double well potential,since they can be experimentally controlled with high accuracy and are suited and used to study macroscopic quantum phenomena on scale of microns with a number of particles typically ranging from to . We study the CSL dynamics of three atomic states showing macroscopic quantum coherence: the atomic coherent state, the superposition of two atomic coherent states, and the…
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