English

Single-Atom Gating of Quantum State Superpositions

Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics 2009-04-21 v1 Materials Science

Abstract

The ultimate miniaturization of electronic devices will likely require local and coherent control of single electronic wavefunctions. Wavefunctions exist within both physical real space and an abstract state space with a simple geometric interpretation: this state space--or Hilbert space--is spanned by mutually orthogonal state vectors corresponding to the quantized degrees of freedom of the real-space system. Measurement of superpositions is akin to accessing the direction of a vector in Hilbert space, determining an angle of rotation equivalent to quantum phase. Here we show that an individual atom inside a designed quantum corral can control this angle, producing arbitrary coherent superpositions of spatial quantum states. Using scanning tunnelling microscopy and nanostructures assembled atom-by-atom we demonstrate how single spins and quantum mirages can be harnessed to image the superposition of two electronic states. We also present a straightforward method to determine the atom path enacting phase rotations between any desired state vectors. A single atom thus becomes a real space handle for an abstract Hilbert space, providing a simple technique for coherent quantum state manipulation at the spatial limit of condensed matter.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0904.2884,
  title  = {Single-Atom Gating of Quantum State Superpositions},
  author = {Christopher R. Moon and Christopher P. Lutz and Hari C. Manoharan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0904.2884},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

Published online 6 April 2008 in Nature Physics; 17 page manuscript (including 4 figures) + 3 page supplement (including 2 figures); supplementary movies available at http://mota.stanford.edu

R2 v1 2026-06-21T12:52:52.138Z