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Quantum Non-Demolition Detection of Strongly Correlated Systems

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arxiv 0709.0527 v2 pith:QDIFDHCA submitted 2007-09-04 cond-mat.other quant-ph

Quantum Non-Demolition Detection of Strongly Correlated Systems

classification cond-mat.other quant-ph
keywords quantumdetectioncorrelatedstronglysystemsatomsgoalslight
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Preparation, manipulation, and detection of strongly correlated states of quantum many body systems are among the most important goals and challenges of modern physics. Ultracold atoms offer an unprecedented playground for realization of these goals. Here we show how strongly correlated states of ultracold atoms can be detected in a quantum non-demolition scheme, that is, in the fundamentally least destructive way permitted by quantum mechanics. In our method, spatially resolved components of atomic spins couple to quantum polarization degrees of freedom of light. In this way quantum correlations of matter are faithfully mapped on those of light; the latter can then be efficiently measured using homodyne detection. We illustrate the power of such spatially resolved quantum noise limited polarization measurement by applying it to detect various standard and "exotic" types of antiferromagnetic order in lattice systems and by indicating the feasibility of detection of superfluid order in Fermi liquids.

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