Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Copyright acknowledgements
- 1 Wave-particle duality
- 2 Cavity quantum electrodynamics
- 3 Quantum nondemolition measurements
- 4 Topological phases
- 5 Macroscopic quantum coherence
- 6 The quantum Zeno paradox
- 7 Testing collapse
- 8 Macroscopic quantum jumps
- 9 Nonlocality
- 10 Tunneling times
- References
- Author index
- Subject index
8 - Macroscopic quantum jumps
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Copyright acknowledgements
- 1 Wave-particle duality
- 2 Cavity quantum electrodynamics
- 3 Quantum nondemolition measurements
- 4 Topological phases
- 5 Macroscopic quantum coherence
- 6 The quantum Zeno paradox
- 7 Testing collapse
- 8 Macroscopic quantum jumps
- 9 Nonlocality
- 10 Tunneling times
- References
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
Introduction
The quantum theory of atoms and molecules had its origin in the famous 1913 paper of Bohr [186] in which he suggested that the interaction of radiation and atoms occurred with the transition of an atom from one stationary internal state to another, accompanied by the emission or absorption of radiation of a frequency determined by the energy difference between these states. These transitions came to be known as ‘quantum jumps’. Since all experiments until the late 1970s used to be carried out with large ensembles of atoms and molecules, these jumps were masked and could not be directly observed; they were only inferred from spectroscopic data. In fact, with the advent of quantum mechanics they eventually came to be regarded as artefacts of Bohr's simple-minded semi-classical model. But with the availability of coherent light sources and single ions prepared in ion traps [187], [188], and optically cooled [189], [190], the issue has been reopened with the experimental demonstration of quantum jumps in single ions [191], [192], [193]. These experiments have also opened up the contentious issue of wave function collapse or reduction on measurement, as they can be regarded as making collapse visible on the oscilloscope screen [191].
Evidence of the discrete nature of quantum transitions in a single quantum system had been accumulating from the observation of photon anti-bunching in single-atom resonance fluorescence [194], the tunneling of single electrons in metal–oxide-–semiconductor junctions [195] and spin-flips of individual electrons in a Penning trap [196].
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Testing Quantum Mechanics on New Ground , pp. 132 - 140Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999