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Technical CommentsComment on "Quantum State Transfer Between Matter and Light"Matsukevich and Kuzmich (1) describe an interesting experiment directed toward the realization of scalable quantum networks through the protocol of (2). In particular, they demonstrate coherence between two atomic ensembles comprising two cylindrical volumes of cold rubidium atoms within a single magnetooptical trap. The authors claim that their measurements "constitute a complete set of tools required to build an arbitrary large-scale quantum network" and assert that this advance is achieved by way of several essential steps involving quantum entanglement.Certainly, entanglement is a crucial requirement for the quantum repeater architecture proposed in (2). It is important to realize, however, that every measurement presented in (1) can be reproduced by quantum states that are unentangled. More specifically, Matsukevich and Kuzmich (1) make three explicit claims about entanglement: (i) entanglement between a single photon and a collective excitation in the two ensembles is created; (ii) a nearly maximally entangled state between the two ensembles is created; and (iii) a maximally entangled state between two photons would be created if one of the fields were not detected but instead were stored in an optical fiber. It would be reasonable to expect to find these claims confirmed by appropriate measurements and by quantitative analysis of the resulting data that would substantiate quoting an experimentally determined degree of entanglement and associated uncertainty. Such an analysis, however, is absent in (1). Moreover, our analysis of this experiment arrives at rather different conclusions: First, we find that the data presented in (1) are insufficient to determine any value of the entanglement. Indeed, all results are consistent with unentangled states. Second, certain data have been discarded to produce figures 2 and 3 in (1), with the displayed "conditional probabilities" improperly defined by fiat. Third, crucial data necessary to quantify entanglement cannot be obtained by the experimental setup used in (1). Fourth, although Matsukevich and Kuzmich (1) suggest that their study has a strong connection to the results of (3) and draw upon that analysis, there are crucial differences between the two experiments. Most important, the criteria developed in (3), which Matsukevich and Kuzmich nevertheless employ, are not directly applicable to the results in (1). In the remainder of this comment, we provide the main ideas behind our refutation of the three claims in (1) outlined above (4). We begin with a consideration of claim (ii)the question of entanglement between two atomic ensemblesand then more briefly address claims (i) and (iii).
To address the issue of entanglement between the atomic ensembles, we begin by considering an entangled state of the form
= /4, this state is maximally entangled for any value of , which is the form of the state that Matsukevich and Kuzmich (1) claim to produce for the two atomic ensembles. It is important to note that the state in Eq. 1 is an idealization of the actual state one would and should ascribe to the system under investigation. In reality, the state will inevitably not be a pure state but a mixed state specified by a density operator . Moreover, the actual system also will contain excitations in other, unwanted, modes. There will necessarily be finite probabilities for zero (|00 ) and multiple (|11 ) excitations in the atomic and field modes (2).
Matsukevich and Kuzmich (1) attempt to verify entanglement in three steps: first, by varying the angle
Second, mapping the full state
Third, by omitting data that correspond to detection events in which no photon was recorded, the authors can, in principle, make no definite estimate of the entanglement in the state
« 1, corresponding to the conditions in (1). The state | ' is a product state and hence is unentangled. However, a measurement of | ' that keeps only those data arising from the two terms |0 |1 and |1 |0 , while discarding null (|0 |0 ) and higher order (|1 |1 ) events, is indistinguishable from one that starts with the entangled state ![]() in Eq. 1 and ignores null-detection events, as is the case in (1). Thus, all data in (1) can in principle be obtained from unentangled states between the two ensembles (4).
Apart from these objections to the procedures followed in (1), it is useful to compare the methods and results of that study with those of (3). For instance, figures 2 and 3 in (1) appear very similar to figures 3 and 4 in (3), but there are certain crucial differences. First is the fact, mentioned above, that a physically different angle is varied ( We now return to claims (i) and (iii) in (1)that is, the claims about entanglement between a photon and a joint collective excitation in the two ensembles, and entanglement between two photons. In both cases, there is never such an entangled state (4). The authors refer to a situation in which a state is produced that is a coherent superposition (in the ideal case) or a mixed state (in the generic case) of two states, one state where no excitations are present and one where two excitations are present with small probability p. For p « 1, such a state has almost no entanglement [such small amounts of entanglement can still be detected by means of Clauser Horne Shimony Holt (CSHS) inequalities (4)]. However, if one could project out the "vacuum part," then the remaining state with two excitations would be entangled in the ideal case (in the generic case, one still would have to check whether any entanglement would remain in the mixed state). In their experiment, Matsukevich and Kuzmich (1) sometimes detect one of the excitations and infer that there must have been an entangled state. Clearly, however, no such state was present before the measurement (because the vacuum part was still there) or after the measurement (because the detected excitation, a photon in fact, is always destroyed). The remark that storing instead of detecting the field would produce a (nearly) maximally entangled state is also incorrect, because in this case the vacuum part still would be present as well. Only if one could perform an extremely difficult quantum-nondemolition (QND) measurement (that is, a measurement of the presence of a photon without destroying it) would one approach a maximally entangled state. We therefore conclude that, although Matsukevich and Kuzmich (1) provide important progress in the quest to develop the tools necessary for implementation of scalable quantum networks, the principal claims in the study are, unfortunately, largely unfounded. The measurements reported do not justify the claim of the production of "nearly maximally entangled states" between signal and idler photons, between two atomic ensembles, or between the signal photon and the two ensembles. The data reported are consistent with a wide class of unentangled states between the two ensembles. Absent measurements to substantiate a convincing case for entanglement, the sweeping assertion in (1) that the reported capabilities "constitute a complete set of tools required to build an arbitrary large-scale quantum network" is without credibility.
References and Notes
Supporting Online Materialwww.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/309/5738/1187b/DC1 SOM Text References
Received for publication 31 January 2005. Accepted for publication 8 June 2005.
The editors suggest the following Related Resources on Science sites:In Science Magazine
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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)