Phase Doubling and Entanglement in Coherent Many-Body Chemical Reactions
Shu Nagata, Tadej Meznarsic, Chuixin Kong, Cheng Chin

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates phase doubling and entanglement in coherent many-body chemical reactions using matter wave diffraction, confirming quantum coherence and non-classical correlations in molecular formation.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental observation of matter wave phase doubling and entanglement in quantum degenerate chemical reactions.
Findings
Observation of phase doubling in molecular matter waves
Verification of spatial phase coherence via diffraction
Detection of non-classical correlations indicating entanglement
Abstract
In the quantum degenerate regime, atoms and molecules can occupy a single quantum state, forming coherent matter waves. Here reactions are described by nonlinear mixing of the matter waves, giving rise to quantum many-body chemistry, where spatial coherence is preserved between the reactants and products. While the phase matching of matter waves during the reaction process has been theoretically predicted, experimental confirmation has remained elusive. Here we report on the observation of matter wave phase doubling when bosonic atoms pair into molecules. Using matter wave diffraction, we verify spatial phase coherence and observe a two-fold increase of phase in the molecular wavefunction, confirming the matter-wave version of phase doubling. The diffraction patterns also reveal non-classical correlations indicative of entangled atom pairs formed during the reaction. Our results…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum, superfluid, helium dynamics · Quantum many-body systems
