A Quantum measurement induced ground-state transition

ORAL

Abstract

The act of measurement is necessarily invasive as the observer and the system become entangled. We show that already weak (non-projective) measurements with a sensor dot can drive a ground-state transition in the adjacent double quantum dot [arXiv:2010.04635]. The experiment operates close to the (1,0)-(0,1) charge degeneracy line where an electron resides in the left and right dot with equal probabilities. With increasing measurement strength (sensor bias), the line deforms into an S-shaped curve. The area enclosed between S-shape and line hosts a new measurement induced ground-state. Here, the system prepared in the (1,0) ground state with an electron in the left dot, occupies the (0,1) state while being measured. We have developed a model that quantitatively accounts for the experiment. Each electron passing the sensor induces a capacitive shift in the adjacent quantum dot level. The resulting level-broadening enhances charge transfer with the reservoir, allowing the system to populate an energetically unfavorable state. Changing the nature of a many-body state simply by observing it is a major shift in how we understand the act of measurement and poses new challenges for quantum technologies.

*SNI, NCCR QSIT and SPIN, Swiss NSF, ERC Starting Grant, EU H2020, EMP, GHE Foundation

Presenters

  • Christian Scheller

    • Physics, University of Basel
    • University of Basel

Authors

  • Michael S Ferguson

    • Theoretical Physics, ETH Zürich
  • Leon Camenzind

    • Physics, University of Basel
    • Department of Physics, University of Basel
    • University of Basel
  • Clemens Müller

    • IBM Quantum
  • Daniel E. F. Biesinger

    • Physics, University of Basel
  • Christian Scheller

    • Physics, University of Basel
    • University of Basel
  • Bernd H. Braunecker

    • SUPA, University of St. Andrews
    • School of Physics and Astronomy, University of St Andrews
  • Dominik Zumbuhl

    • University of Basel
    • Physics, University of Basel
    • Department of Physics, University of Basel
  • Oded Zilberberg

    • Theoretical Physics, ETH Zürich
    • Institute for Theoretical Physics, ETH Zurich
    • ETH Zurich