4.8 Article

Decoherence of matter waves by thermal emission of radiation

Journal

NATURE
Volume 427, Issue 6976, Pages 711-714

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature02276

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Emergent quantum technologies have led to increasing interest in decoherence - the processes that limit the appearance of quantum effects and turn them into classical phenomena. One important cause of decoherence is the interaction of a quantum system with its environment, which 'entangles' the two and distributes the quantum coherence over so many degrees of freedom as to render it unobservable. Decoherence theory(1-4) has been complemented by experiments using matter waves coupled to external photons(5-7) or molecules(8), and by investigations using coherent photon states(9), trapped ions(10) and electron interferometers(11,12). Large molecules are particularly suitable for the investigation of the quantum-classical transition because they can store much energy in numerous internal degrees of freedom; the internal energy can be converted into thermal radiation and thus induce decoherence. Here we report matter wave interferometer experiments in which C-70 molecules lose their quantum behaviour by thermal emission of radiation. We find good quantitative agreement between our experimental observations and microscopic decoherence theory. Decoherence by emission of thermal radiation is a general mechanism that should be relevant to all macroscopic bodies.

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