Publication | Open Access
Probing spontaneous wave-function collapse with entangled levitating nanospheres
22
Citations
66
References
2017
Year
EngineeringMany-body Quantum PhysicQuantum MeasurementQuantum SensingMeasurement ProblemSpontaneous Wave-function CollapseQuantum ComputingStandard Quantum MechanicsQuantum EntanglementQuantum MatterWave-function Collapse ModelsPhotonicsQuantum SciencePhysicsCollapse EffectQuantum DecoherenceQuantum OpticNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsQuantum System
Wave-function collapse models are considered to be the modified theories of standard quantum mechanics at the macroscopic level. By introducing nonlinear stochastic terms in the Schr\"odinger equation, these models (different from standard quantum mechanics) predict that it is fundamentally impossible to prepare macroscopic systems in macroscopic superpositions. The validity of these models can only be examined by experiments, and hence efficient protocols for these kinds of experiments are greatly needed. Here we provide a protocol that is able to probe the postulated collapse effect by means of the entanglement of the center-of-mass motion of two nanospheres optically trapped in a Fabry-P\'erot cavity. We show that the collapse noise results in a large reduction of the steady-state entanglement, and the entanglement, with and without the collapse effect, shows distinguishable scalings with certain system parameters, which can be used to determine unambiguously the effect of these models.
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