18 research outputs found
Coherent control of neutron interferometry
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Physics, February 2007.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 125-128).In this thesis, several novel techniques are proposed and demonstrated for measuring the coherent properties of materials and testing aspects of quantum information processing using a single crystal neutron interferometer. In particular we introduce methods for reciprocal space encoding of spatial information systematically in a neutron interferometer. First, a proof of principle experiment is conducted for coherent reciprocal space neutron imaging. This newly proposed technique overcomes the limitation of spacial resolution of current two dimensional neutron detectors. Second, an experiment to measure the vertical coherent length of a neutron interferometer is reported, which extends the previously achieved path separation. Third, we propose a new interferometry geometry that reduces the sensitivity of the neutron interferometer to environmental vibrational disturbances. The method is based on a quantum error compensating algorithm. Finally, a new method that is capable of measuring the autocorrelation function of a sample is proposed. This new technique can extend the capability of traditional neutron scattering experiments. All experiments are conducted at the neutron interferometry facility at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).by Dmitry A. Pushin.Ph.D
Quantum correlations in a noisy neutron interferometer
We investigate quantum coherences in the presence of noise by entangling the
spin and path degrees of freedom of the output neutron beam from a noisy
three-blade perfect crystal neutron interferometer. We find that in the
presence of dephasing noise on the path degree of freedom the entanglement of
the output state reduces to zero, however the quantum discord remains non-zero
for all noise values. Hence even in the presence of strong phase noise
non-classical correlations persist between the spin and path of the neutron
beam. This indicates that measurements performed on the spin of the neutron
beam will induce a disturbance on the path state. We calculate the effect of
the spin measurement by observing the changes in the observed contrast of the
interferometer for an output beam post-selected on a given spin state. In doing
so we demonstrate that these measurements allow us to implement a quantum
eraser, and a which-way measurement of the path taken by the neutron through
the interferometer. While strong phase noise removes the quantum eraser, the
spin-filtered which-way measurement is robust to phase noise. We experimentally
demonstrate this disturbance by comparing the contrasts of the output beam with
and without spin measurements of three neutron interferometers with varying
noise strengths. This demonstrates that even in the presence of noise that
suppresses path coherence and spin-path entanglement, a neutron interferometer
still exhibits uniquely quantum behaviour.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. V3 includes expanded theoretical analysis and
discussion of post-selected spin measurements in different base
Plants with genetically encoded autoluminescence
Autoluminescent plants engineered to express a bacterial bioluminescence gene cluster in plastids have not been widely adopted because of low light output. We engineered tobacco plants with a fungal bioluminescence system that converts caffeic acid (present in all plants) into luciferin and report self-sustained luminescence that is visible to the naked eye. Our findings could underpin development of a suite of imaging tools for plants
Visualization 1: Holography with a neutron interferometer
The intensity profile of Fig. 2 (b) as a continuous function of the topological charge q. Originally published in Optics Express on 03 October 2016 (oe-24-20-22528
Visualization 3: Holography with a neutron interferometer
The two-dimensional phase profile of Fig. 4 with the overall phase in the reconstruction plane varied Originally published in Optics Express on 03 October 2016 (oe-24-20-22528