Nuclear spin squeezing by continuous quantum non-demolition measurement: a theoretical study
Alan Serafin (LKB (Lhomond)), Yvan Castin (LKB (Lhomond)), Matteo, Fadel (Unibas), Philipp Treutlein (Unibas), Alice Sinatra (LKB (Lhomond))

TL;DR
This theoretical study explores how continuous quantum non-demolition measurements can generate long-lived nuclear spin squeezed states in helium-3 gas at room temperature, advancing quantum state control in macroscopic systems.
Contribution
It introduces a model for nuclear spin squeezing via QND measurement in helium-3, including detailed analysis of measurement schemes and decoherence effects.
Findings
Conditional variance decreases as (Γ_sq t)^(-1)
Squeezing rate depends linearly on light intensity at weak coupling
Limit on squeezing set by decoherence rate γ_α
Abstract
We propose to take advantage of the weak coupling of ground-state helium-3 nuclear spin to its environment to produce long-lived macroscopic quantum states, nuclear spin squeezed states, in a gas cell at room temperature. To perform a quantum non-demolition measurement of a transverse component of the polarized collective nuclear spin, we maintain a population in helium-3 metastable state with a discharge. The collective spin associated to metastable level hybridizes with the ground state one by metastability exchange collisions. To access nuclear spin fluctuations, one continuously measures the light leaking out of an optical cavity, where it has interacted dispersively with the metastable state collective spin. In a three coupled collective spin model (nuclear, metastable and Stokes), we calculate moments of the nuclear spin squeezed component conditioned on the time…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum optics and atomic interactions
