Engineering spin squeezing in a 3D optical lattice with interacting spin-orbit-coupled fermions

One of the most important tasks in modern quantum science is to coherently control and entangle many-body systems, and to subsequently use these systems to realize powerful quantum technologies such as quantum-enhanced sensors. However, many-body entangled states are difficult to prepare and preserv...

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Published inPhysical review research Vol. 1; no. 3; p. 033075
Main Authors He, P., Perlin, M. A., Muleady, S. R., Lewis-Swan, R. J., Hutson, R. B., Ye, J., Rey, A. M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published American Physical Society 05.11.2019
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Summary:One of the most important tasks in modern quantum science is to coherently control and entangle many-body systems, and to subsequently use these systems to realize powerful quantum technologies such as quantum-enhanced sensors. However, many-body entangled states are difficult to prepare and preserve since internal dynamics and external noise rapidly degrade any useful entanglement. Here, we introduce a protocol that counterintuitively exploits inhomogeneities, a typical source of dephasing in a many-body system, in combination with interactions to generate metrologically useful and robust many-body entangled states. Motivated by current limitations in state-of-the-art three-dimensional (3D) optical lattice clocks (OLCs) operating at quantum degeneracy, we use local interactions in a Hubbard model with spin-orbit coupling to achieve a spin-locking effect. In addition to prolonging interparticle spin coherence, spin locking transforms the dephasing effect of spin-orbit coupling into a collective spin-squeezing process that can be further enhanced by applying a modulated drive. Our protocol is fully compatible with state-of-the-art 3D OLC interrogation schemes and may be used to improve their sensitivity, which is currently limited by the intrinsic quantum noise of independent atoms. We demonstrate that even with realistic experimental imperfections, our protocol may generate ∼10−14dB of spin squeezing in ∼1 second with ∼10^{2}−10^{4} atoms. This capability allows OLCs to enter a new era of quantum-enhanced sensing using correlated quantum states of driven nonequilibrium systems.
ISSN:2643-1564
2643-1564
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevResearch.1.033075