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Dive into the research topics where Gershon Kurizki is active.

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Featured researches published by Gershon Kurizki.


Nature | 2000

Acceleration of quantum decay processes by frequent observations

A. G. Kofman; Gershon Kurizki

In theory, the decay of any unstable quantum state can be inhibited by sufficiently frequent measurements—the quantum Zeno effect. Although this prediction has been tested only for transitions between two coupled, essentially stable states, the quantum Zeno effect is thought to be a general feature of quantum mechanics, applicable to radioactive or radiative decay processes. This generality arises from the assumption that, in principle, successive observations can be made at time intervals too short for the system to change appreciably. Here we show not only that the quantum Zeno effect is fundamentally unattainable in radiative or radioactive decay (because the required measurement rates would cause the system to disintegrate), but also that these processes may be accelerated by frequent measurements. We find that the modification of the decay process is determined by the energy spread incurred by the measurements (as a result of the time–energy uncertainty relation), and the distribution of states to which the decaying state is coupled. Whereas the inhibitory quantum Zeno effect may be feasible in a limited class of systems, the opposite effect—accelerated decay—appears to be much more ubiquitous.


Physical Review Letters | 2001

Universal Dynamical Control of Quantum Mechanical Decay: Modulation of the Coupling to the Continuum

A. G. Kofman; Gershon Kurizki

We derive and investigate an expression for the dynamically modified decay of states coupled to an arbitrary continuum. This expression is universally valid for weak temporal perturbations. The resulting insights can serve as useful recipes for optimized control of decay and decoherence.


Physical Review A | 2000

Improvement on teleportation of continuous variables by photon subtraction via conditional measurement

Tomáš Opatrný; Gershon Kurizki; D.-G. Welsch

We show that the recently proposed scheme of teleportation of continuous variables [S.L. Braunstein and H.J. Kimble, Phys. Rev. Lett. 80, 869 (1998)] can be improved by a conditional measurement in the preparation of the entangled state shared by the sender and the recipient. The conditional measurement subtracts photons from the original entangled two-mode squeezed vacuum, by transmitting each mode through a low-reflectivity beam splitter and performing a joint photon-number measurement on the reflected beams. In this way the degree of entanglement of the shared state is increased and so is the fidelity of the teleported state.


Journal of Modern Optics | 1994

Spontaneous and Induced Atomic Decay in Photonic Band Structures

A. G. Kofman; Gershon Kurizki; Boris Sherman

Abstract We present a comprehensive quantum electrodynamical analysis of the interaction between a continuum with photonic band gaps (PBGs) or frequency cut-off and an excited two-level atom, which can be either ‘bare’ or ‘dressed’ by coupling to a near-resonant field mode. A diversity of novel features in the atom and field dynamics is shown to arise from the non-Markovian character of radiative decay into such a continuum of modes. Firstly the excited atom is shown to evolve, by spontaneous decay, into a superposition of non-decaying single-photon dressed states, each having an energy in a different PBG, and a decaying component. This superposition is determined by the atomic resonance shift, induced by the spontaneously emitted photon, into or out of a PBG. The main novel feature exhibited by the decaying excited-state component is the occurrence of beats between the shifted atomic resonance frequency and the PBG cut-off frequencies, corresponding to a non-Lorentzian emission spectrum. Secondly the ind...


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Quantum technologies with hybrid systems

Gershon Kurizki; Patrice Bertet; Yuimaru Kubo; Klaus Mølmer; David Petrosyan; Peter Rabl; Jörg Schmiedmayer

An extensively pursued current direction of research in physics aims at the development of practical technologies that exploit the effects of quantum mechanics. As part of this ongoing effort, devices for quantum information processing, secure communication, and high-precision sensing are being implemented with diverse systems, ranging from photons, atoms, and spins to mesoscopic superconducting and nanomechanical structures. Their physical properties make some of these systems better suited than others for specific tasks; thus, photons are well suited for transmitting quantum information, weakly interacting spins can serve as long-lived quantum memories, and superconducting elements can rapidly process information encoded in their quantum states. A central goal of the envisaged quantum technologies is to develop devices that can simultaneously perform several of these tasks, namely, reliably store, process, and transmit quantum information. Hybrid quantum systems composed of different physical components with complementary functionalities may provide precisely such multitasking capabilities. This article reviews some of the driving theoretical ideas and first experimental realizations of hybrid quantum systems and the opportunities and challenges they present and offers a glance at the near- and long-term perspectives of this fascinating and rapidly expanding field.


Nature | 2008

Thermodynamic control by frequent quantum measurements

Noam Erez; Goren Gordon; Mathias Nest; Gershon Kurizki

Heat flow between a large thermal ‘bath’ and a smaller system brings them progressively closer to thermal equilibrium while increasing their entropy. Fluctuations involving a small fraction of a statistical ensemble of systems interacting with the bath result in deviations from this trend. In this respect, quantum and classical thermodynamics are in agreement. Here we predict a different trend in a purely quantum mechanical setting: disturbances of thermal equilibrium between two-level systems (TLSs) and a bath, caused by frequent, brief quantum non-demolition measurements of the TLS energy states. By making the measurements increasingly frequent, we encounter first the anti-Zeno regime and then the Zeno regime (namely where the TLSs’ relaxation respectively speeds up and slows down). The corresponding entropy and temperature of both the system and the bath are then found to either decrease or increase depending only on the rate of observation, contrary to the standard thermodynamical rules that hold for memory-less (Markov) baths. From a practical viewpoint, these anomalies may offer the possibility of very fast control of heat and entropy in quantum systems, allowing cooling and state purification over an interval much shorter than the time needed for thermal equilibration or for a feedback control loop.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Optimal dynamical decoherence control of a qubit.

Goren Gordon; Gershon Kurizki; Daniel A. Lidar

We present a theory of dynamical control by modulation for optimal decoherence reduction. The theory is based on the non-Markovian Euler-Lagrange equation for the energy-constrained field that minimizes the average dephasing rate of a qubit for any given dephasing spectrum.


Nature | 2011

Atomic homodyne detection of continuous-variable entangled twin-atom states

C. Gross; Helmut Strobel; Eike Nicklas; Tilman Zibold; Nir Bar-Gill; Gershon Kurizki; M. K. Oberthaler

Historically, the completeness of quantum theory has been questioned using the concept of bipartite continuous-variable entanglement. The non-classical correlations (entanglement) between the two subsystems imply that the observables of one subsystem are determined by the measurement choice on the other, regardless of the distance between the subsystems. Nowadays, continuous-variable entanglement is regarded as an essential resource, allowing for quantum enhanced measurement resolution, the realization of quantum teleportation and quantum memories, or the demonstration of the Einstein–Podolsky–Rosen paradox. These applications rely on techniques to manipulate and detect coherences of quantum fields, the quadratures. Whereas in optics coherent homodyne detection of quadratures is a standard technique, for massive particles a corresponding method was missing. Here we report the realization of an atomic analogue to homodyne detection for the measurement of matter-wave quadratures. The application of this technique to a quantum state produced by spin-changing collisions in a Bose–Einstein condensate reveals continuous-variable entanglement, as well as the twin-atom character of the state. Our results provide a rare example of continuous-variable entanglement of massive particles. The direct detection of atomic quadratures has applications not only in experimental quantum atom optics, but also for the measurement of fields in many-body systems of massive particles.


Physical Review A | 2002

Symmetric photon-photon coupling by atoms with Zeeman-split sublevels

David Petrosyan; Gershon Kurizki

Department of Chemical Physics, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel(February 1, 2008)We propose a simple scheme for highly efficient nonlinear interaction between two weak optical fields.The scheme is based on the attainment of electromagnetically induced transparency simultaneouslyfor both fields via transitions between magnetically split F = 1 atomic sublevels, in the presence oftwo driving fields. Thereby, equal slow group velocities and symmetric cross-coupling of the weakfields over long distances are achieved. By simply tuning the fields, this scheme can either yieldgiant cross-phase modulation or ultrasensitive two-photon switching.PACS number(s): 42.50.Gy, 03.67.-a


Physical Review A | 2009

Reversible state transfer between superconducting qubits and atomic ensembles

David Petrosyan; Guy Bensky; Gershon Kurizki; Igor E. Mazets; Johannes Majer; Jörg Schmiedmayer

We examine the possibility of coherent, reversible information transfer between solid-state superconducting qubits and ensembles of ultra-cold atoms. Strong coupling between these systems is mediated by a microwave transmission line resonator that interacts near-resonantly with the atoms via their optically excited Rydberg states. The solid-state qubits can then be used to implement rapid quantum logic gates, while collective metastable states of the atoms can be employed for long-term storage and optical read-out of quantum information.

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A. G. Kofman

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Goren Gordon

Weizmann Institute of Science

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I. E. Mazets

Weizmann Institute of Science

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V. M. Akulin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Guy Bensky

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Nir Bar-Gill

Weizmann Institute of Science

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A. Kozhekin

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Noam Erez

Weizmann Institute of Science

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