Entangling non planar molecules via inversion doublet transition with negligible spontaneous emission
Isabel Gonzalo, Miguel A. Ant\'on

TL;DR
This paper theoretically explores how non-planar molecules with inversion doubling can be entangled via microwave transitions, enabling long-lived entangled states with potential applications in quantum information processing.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to entangle non-planar molecules using inversion doublet transitions with negligible spontaneous emission, highlighting their suitability for quantum technologies.
Findings
Entanglement oscillates with frequency determined by dipole-dipole interaction.
Negligible spontaneous emission allows for sustained entangled states.
External fields can induce controlled oscillations and population of entangled states.
Abstract
We analyze theoretically the entanglement between two non-planar and light identical molecules (e.g., pyramidal as ) that present inversion doubling due to the internal spatial inversion of their nuclear conformations by tunneling. The peculiarity of this system lies in the simplicity of this type of molecular system in which two near levels can be connected by allowed electric dipole transition with considerable value of the dipole moment transition and negligible spontaneous emission because the transition is in the microwave or far-infrared range. These properties give place to entanglement states oscillating by free evolution with frequency determined by the dipole-dipole interaction and negligible spontaneous decay, which allows to consider an efficient quantum Zeno effect by frequent measurements of one of the entangled states. If the molecules are initially both in the…
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