Ruling the Waves
Ian S. Osborne,Robert Coontz +1 more
42
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the recent progress and developments of coherence in optical, atomic, and semiconductor systems, and how manipulating that coherence may lead to useful applications and to experimental systems for studying the elements of quantum mechanics.
read more
Abstract: T hink about coherent systems, and odds are that the first example to cross your mind will be a laser: a device that emits monochromatic light homogenized so that the photons propagate with their phase in lockstep. The well-defined wavefront of the laser beam makes it possible to focus the light to spot sizes on the order of the wavelength of the light without the aberrations usually observed with the random wavefront of incoherent light. The well-defined phase also provides a medium capable of storing and carrying information more efficiently than the intensity-modulated signals typical of incoherent sources. These useful properties of coherence have made lasers almost ubiquitous in science and technology, and that “almost” is shrinking by the day.
In general, coherence comes about when individual components of a system act in unison, either in phase or with a fixed phase difference between the components. More accurately, the system can be described as a local oscillator whose wavefunction contains phase and amplitude terms that define how the system evolves in space and time. The collection of articles in this special issue describes the recent progress and developments of coherence in optical, atomic, and semiconductor systems, and how manipulating that coherence may lead to useful applications and to experimental systems for studying the elements of quantum mechanics.
Since the first demonstration of the laser in 1960, progress in improving the extent of the spatial and temporal coherence of laser light has been steady. Psaltis (p. [1359][1]) reviews developments in optical coherence and highlights examples of the key role coherence has played in applications in imaging, communication, and information processing and storage. Just as lasers revolutionized the field of optics, many researchers have high expectations that other coherent systems will provide similar advances in their respective fields. Exploiting the fundamental tenet of quantum mechanics whereby particles have the properties of waves, Kasevich (p. [1363][2]) reviews coherence effects in collections of cold atoms and describes how the shorter wavelengths associated with atoms and the recent accessibility of bright coherent atom sources may lead to precision measurements beyond anything currently available to the optical regime. For integration and potential applications, the ideal system would be based in semiconductors. Snoke (p. [1368][3]) describes recent work toward the formation of coherent semiconductor systems.
With coherence in the atomic and optical systems generally comprising macroscopic systems, Mabuchi and Doherty (p. [1372][4]) look at coherence effects at the quantum limit, probing the interactions between single atoms and single photons confined to high-quality cavities. In addition to providing invaluable information on the limits of quantum mechanics, such effects might also shed new light on information science in the quantum regime.
The section opens with a pair of News features by staff writers Charles Seife and Robert Service. Seife presents a smattering of common applications that scientists and engineers have found for coherent waves, whether in light, sound, or subatomic particles. Service describes efforts to create new coherent sources of the type of radiation known as “hard” x-rays—a long-sought range of high frequencies with enormous potential for scientific research, technology, and medicine.
[1]: /lookup/doi/10.1126/science.1078823
[2]: /lookup/doi/10.1126/science.1079430
[3]: /lookup/doi/10.1126/science.1078082
[4]: /lookup/doi/10.1126/science.1078446
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
NMR techniques for quantum control and computation
TL;DR: In this article, a broad variety of pulse control and tomographic techniques have been developed for, and used in, NMR quantum computation and many of these will be useful in other quantum systems now being considered for the implementation of quantum information processing tasks.
•Book
The Emergence of Entrepreneurship Policy: Governance, Start-Ups, and Growth in the U.S. Knowledge Economy
David M. Hart
- 03 Dec 2009
TL;DR: In this article, Hart et al. discuss the role of government in entrepreneurship policy and its role in the success of start-ups and spin-offs in the U.S. economy.
173
Accounting for e-commerce: abstractions, virtualism and the cultural circuit of capital
TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider the phenomenon of e-commerce as an achievement of serial acts of representation and re-representation, drawing upon the concepts of virtualism and the cultural circuit of capital, and demonstrate the material consequences of economic abstractions.
55
Scalable design of tailored soft pulses for coherent control.
TL;DR: A scalable scheme to design optimized soft pulses and pulse sequences for coherent control of interacting quantum many-body systems based on the cluster expansion and the time-dependent perturbation theory implemented numerically is presented.
Related Papers (5)
Carl Shapiro,Hal R. Varian +1 more
- 01 Jan 1999
[...]
David C. Mowery,Nathan Rosenberg +1 more
Richard R. Nelson
- 01 Jan 1993
Michael E. Porter
- 01 Jan 1990