Observation of a quantum phase from classical rotation of a single spin
Alexander A. Wood, Lloyd C. L. Hollenberg, Robert E. Scholten, Andy, M. Martin

TL;DR
This paper experimentally demonstrates a quantum phase shift in a single electron spin caused directly by physical rotation, linking quantum spin behavior with classical rotational motion.
Contribution
It reports the first direct measurement of a rotation-induced quantum phase shift in a single electron spin without magnetic field transduction.
Findings
Detected nonlinear phase accumulation in a rotating NV center
Demonstrated fundamental connection between rotation and quantum phase
Potential applications in rotation sensing and quantum nanomechanics
Abstract
The theory of angular momentum connects physical rotations and quantum spins together at a fundamental level. Physical rotation of a quantum system will therefore affect fundamental quantum operations, such as spin rotations in projective Hilbert space, but these effects are subtle and experimentally challenging to observe due to the fragility of quantum coherence. Here we report a measurement of a single-electron-spin phase shift arising directly from physical rotation, without transduction through magnetic fields or ancillary spins. This phase shift is observed by measuring the phase difference between a microwave driving field and a rotating two-level electron spin system, and can accumulate nonlinearly in time. We detect the nonlinear phase using spin-echo interferometry of a single nitrogen-vacancy qubit in a diamond rotating at 200,000rpm. Our measurements demonstrate the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiamond and Carbon-based Materials Research · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Quantum optics and atomic interactions
