Seeing a single photon without destroying it

Citation
G. Nogues et al., Seeing a single photon without destroying it, NATURE, 400(6741), 1999, pp. 239-242
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Multidisciplinary,Multidisciplinary,Multidisciplinary
Journal title
NATURE
ISSN journal
00280836 → ACNP
Volume
400
Issue
6741
Year of publication
1999
Pages
239 - 242
Database
ISI
SICI code
0028-0836(19990715)400:6741<239:SASPWD>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
Light detection is usually a destructive process, in that detectors annihil ate photons and convert them into electrical signals, making it impossible to see a single photon twice. But this limitation is not fundamental-quantu m non-demolition strategies(1-3) permit repeated measurements of physically observable quantities, yielding identical results. For example, quantum no n-demolition measurements of light intensity have been demonstrated(4-14), suggesting possibilities for detecting weak forces and gravitational waves( 3). But such experiments, based on nonlinear optics, are sensitive only to macroscopic photon fluxes. The non-destructive measurement of a single phot on requires an extremely strong matter-radiation coupling; this can be real ized in cavity quantum electrodynamics(15), where the strength of the inter action between an atom and a photon can overwhelm all dissipative couplings to the environment. Here we report a cavity quantum electrodynamics experi ment in which we detect a single photon non-destructively. We use atomic in terferometry to measure the phase shift in an atomic wavefunction, caused b y a cycle of photon absorption and emission. Our method amounts to a restri cted quantum non-demolition measurement which can be applied only to states containing one or zero photons. It may lead to quantum logic gates(16) bas ed on cavity quantum electrodynamics, and multi-atom entanglement(17).