Synopsis

Could Levitated Nanoparticles Test Spontaneous Wave-Function Collapse?

Physics 12, s81
The motion of hovering nanoparticles might reveal that quantum wave functions collapse spontaneously, but three common measurement methods are not ready for prime time.
Xavier Barker

One conundrum of quantum mechanics is how a particle occupying many states snaps to a single state when measured. One theory posits that measurement has nothing to do with this “wave-function collapse,” suggesting instead that it happens spontaneously. Now, researchers have analyzed several ways one might look for spontaneous wave-function collapse using levitated nanoparticles. Though no technique is yet up to the challenge, they identify some promising avenues for investigation.

If spontaneous collapse models are correct, the wave function of a given atom collapses unbidden once every hundred million years or so. Get enough atoms together—in a nanoparticle, for example—and odds are one of their wave functions is collapsing at any moment. Thanks to the uncertainty principle, all that collapsing should slightly jostle the nanoparticle. Some researchers have proposed looking for this collapse-induced motion, but like any object, a nanoparticle moves around anyway because of the random motions of atoms in the environment. The trick is to build a device that can trap a nanoparticle and detect motion beyond what’s expected.

To see if this is possible, Andrea Vinante, of the University of Southampton, UK, and colleagues considered a hypothetical experiment where a 200-nm-wide ball of silica is levitated by electric fields in a cryogenic vacuum chamber. They calculated the performance of three tools for detecting the ball’s motion: an optical cavity, optical tweezers, and a SQUID (a superconducting device for detecting induced electrical currents).

Technical challenges prevent all of these methods from achieving the required sensitivity, the team found. If these could be overcome, both optical techniques offer greater displacement precision but at the cost of increased noise from heating the particle. SQUIDs produce much less thermal noise but have lower displacement resolution, which necessitates longer measurement times and thus greater trap stability.

This research is published in Physical Review A.

–Christopher Crockett

Christopher Crockett is a freelance writer based in Arlington, Virginia.


Subject Areas

Quantum PhysicsNanophysicsOptics

Related Articles

Quantum “Torch” Begins Its Relay
Quantum Physics

Quantum “Torch” Begins Its Relay

A quantum light source is touring European labs in preparation for the 2025 International Year of Quantum Science and Technology. Read More »

Quantum Machine Learning Goes Photonic
Quantum Physics

Quantum Machine Learning Goes Photonic

Measuring a photon’s angular momentum after it passes through optical devices teaches an algorithm to reconstruct the properties of the photon’s initial quantum state. Read More »

Stiffening a Spring Made of Light
Optics

Stiffening a Spring Made of Light

Adding a nonlinear crystal to an optical spring can change the spring’s stiffness, a finding that could allow the use of such devices as gravitational-wave detectors. Read More »

More Articles