Tomographic imaging of complete quantum state of matter by ultrafast diffraction
Ming Zhang, Shuqiao Zhang, Haitan Xu, Hankai Zhang, Xiangxu Mu, R. J., Dwayne Miller, Anatoly Ischenko, Oriol Vendrell, Zheng Li

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new theoretical method to extend quantum tomography to reconstruct the complete quantum state of matter in multiple dimensions, enabling quantum molecular imaging.
Contribution
The authors develop a theoretical solution to the dimension problem in quantum tomography, allowing for full 3D quantum state reconstruction of molecular matter.
Findings
Overcomes the dimension problem in quantum tomography.
Enables quantum molecular movies with full state reconstruction.
Demonstrated using simulated ultrafast diffraction data of nitrogen molecules.
Abstract
With the ability to directly obtain the Wigner function and density matrix of photon states, quantum tomography (QT) has had a significant impact on quantum optics, quantum computing and quantum information. By an appropriate sequence of measurements on the evolution of each degreeof freedom (DOF), the full quantum state of the observed photonic system can be determined. The first proposal to extend the application of QT to reconstruction of complete quantum states of matter wavepackets had generated enormous interest in ultrafast diffraction imaging and pump-probe spectroscopy of molecules. This interest was elevated with the advent of ultrafast electron and X-ray diffraction techniques using electron accelerators and X-ray free electron lasers to add temporal resolution to the observed nuclear and electron distributions. However, the great interest in this area has been tempered by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced X-ray Imaging Techniques · Laser-Matter Interactions and Applications · Advanced Electron Microscopy Techniques and Applications
