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Wednesday, February 15, 2023

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Physics Colloquium "Is the muon a qubit?" by Prof Stephen Blundell (Oxford)
PLT

Abstract: The unitary evolution of a quantum system preserves its coherence, but interactions between the system and its environment result in decoherence, a process in which the quantum information stored in the system becomes degraded. A spin-polarized positively charged muon implanted in a fluoride crystal realizes such a coherent quantum system, and the entanglement of muon and nearest-neighbor fluorine nuclear spins gives rise to an oscillatory time dependence of the muon polarization that can be detected and measured. The decohering effect of more distant nuclear spins can be modelled quantitatively, allowing a very detailed description of the decoherence processes coupling the muon-fluorine “system” with its “environment,” and allowing us to track the system entropy as the quantum information degrades. I discuss the implications of these results for more general experiments in which spin-polarised particles, such as the muon, can act as probes of local magnetic behaviour.

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