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Light is born from the vacuum: laser modeling confirms a quantum physics prediction

Physicists from Oxford and Lisbon have run a full 3D, time-resolved simulation showing that empty space can act like a nonlinear medium. Their model finds that three intense laser pulses make photons rebound and forge a fourth beam, echoing a long-standing prediction from quantum electrodynamics.

Classical physics treats vacuum as an absence. Quantum theory disagrees. The vacuum teems with flickering pairs of virtual electrons and positrons that borrow energy briefly and vanish. Strong electromagnetic fields can polarize those pairs. That tiny response turns “nothing” into a medium with a faint optical nonlinearity.

When three high-power laser pulses cross at the right angles and frequencies, quantum electrodynamics (QED) predicts four-wave mixing in vacuum. The combined fields nudge virtual pairs, which then mediate photon‑photon scattering. A new, phase‑matched beam should appear with a frequency and direction dictated by the input pulses.

Observation of proton tunneling correlated with phonons and electrons in Pd

Hydrogen in materials finds various applications such as hydrogen storage and heterogeneous catalysis (13). Hydrogen diffusion is an elementary step for hydrogen storage and reactions and has long been studied to date. Hydrogen, as the lightest and smallest atom, manifests nuclear quantum effects including the zero-point vibration, discrete vibrational energy levels, and quantum tunneling (4). These quantum effects are believed to have a substantial impact on diffusion at low temperatures.

The interaction of hydrogen with surroundings such as phonons and electrons of host materials can be crucial for the hydrogen tunneling. It has been theoretically suggested that whereas phonon effects associated with lattice deformation bring about a positive temperature dependence in the tunneling rate, the effect of nonadiabatic electron-hole pair excitation due to the presence of the Fermi surface causes a slightly negative temperature dependence in metals (510). From an experimental viewpoint, however, such temperature-dependent tunneling was rarely observed except for some cases of H on metal surfaces (1119). As for three-dimensional systems, the tunneling was only mimicked by muon, a light isotope with about one-ninth the mass of H, in the spin relaxation experiments in simple metals (2023). Detailed experimental data of the temperature-dependent hydrogen hopping rate at low temperatures in materials are still lacking to comprehensively elucidate the quantum nature of hydrogen.

Absorbed hydrogen in metals occupies interstitial lattice locations. Figure 1A illustrates the face-centered cubic (fcc) lattice structure, where tetrahedral (T) and/or octahedral (O) sites are preferred by hydrogen. Hydrogen atoms are known to thermally diffuse between stable sites via a metastable site at elevated temperatures. At low temperature, the quantum nature appears, and the tunneling between them might also play a decisive role. Although it is recognized that the potential shape is crucial for the tunneling rate (24), the influence of the interaction with surroundings on the tunneling in an asymmetric potential between inequivalent sites such as the stable and metastable sites has hardly been considered even theoretically (25). In this regard, experimental identification of the hopping pathway is also important to address the quantum nature of hydrogen.

Quantum ground states: Scalable counterdiabatic driving technique enables reliable and rapid preparation

Quantum ground states are the states at which quantum systems have the minimum possible energy. Quantum computers are increasingly being used to analyze the ground states of interesting systems, which could in turn inform the design of new materials, chemical compounds, pharmaceutical drugs and other valuable goods.

The reliable preparation of quantum ground states has been a long-standing goal within the physics research community. One quantum computing method to prepare ground states and other desired states is known as adiabatic state preparation.

This is a process that starts from an initial Hamiltonian, a mathematical operator that encodes a system’s total energy and for which the ground state is known, gradually changing it to reach a final Hamiltonian, which encodes the final ground state.

Metasurfaces etched into 2D crystals boost nonlinear optical effects at nanoscale

In January, a team led by Jim Schuck, professor of mechanical engineering at Columbia Engineering, developed a method for creating entangled photon pairs, a critical component of emerging quantum technologies, using a crystalline device just 3.4 micrometers thick.

Now, in a paper published in Nature Photonics in October, Columbia Engineers have shrunk nonlinear platforms with high efficiency down to just 160 nanometers by introducing metasurfaces: artificial geometries etched into ultrathin crystals that imbue them with new optical properties.

“We’ve established a successful recipe to pattern ultrathin crystals at the nanoscale to enhance nonlinearity while maintaining their sub-wavelength-thickness,” said corresponding author Chiara Trovatello is currently an assistant professor at Politecnico di Milano and was a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Global Fellow at Columbia working with Schuck.

Single-photon switch could enable photonic computing

There are few technologies more fundamental to modern life than the ability to control light with precision. From fiber-optic communications to quantum sensors, the manipulation of photons underpins much of our digital infrastructure. Yet one capability has remained frustratingly out of reach: controlling light with light itself at the most fundamental level using single photons to switch or modulate powerful optical beams.

Now, researchers at Purdue University have achieved this long-sought milestone, demonstrating what they call a “photonic transistor” that operates at single-photon intensities.

Their findings, published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, report a nonlinear refractive index several orders of magnitude higher than the best-known materials, a leap that could finally make photonic computing practical.

Atoms passing through walls: Quantum tunneling of hydrogen within palladium crystal

At low temperatures, hydrogen atoms move less like particles and more like waves. This characteristic enables quantum tunneling, the passage of an atom through a barrier with a higher potential energy than the energy of the atom. Understanding how hydrogen atoms move through potential barriers has important industrial applications. However, the small size of hydrogen atoms makes direct observation of their motion extremely challenging.

In a study published in Science Advances, researchers at the Institute of Industrial Science, The University of Tokyo report precise detection of quantum tunneling of hydrogen atoms in palladium metal.

Palladium is a metal that absorbs hydrogen. Palladium atoms are arranged in a repeating three-dimensional cubic pattern, otherwise known as a lattice. Hydrogen atoms can enter this lattice by occupying interstitial sites between the large palladium atoms. These sites are octahedral and tetrahedral in shape. Hydrogen sits stably in an octahedral site and can hop to another octahedral site via a tetrahedral site, which is metastable, i.e., less stable than an octahedral site.

Symmetry simplifies quantum noise analysis, paving way for better error correction

Researchers from the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, and Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore have achieved a breakthrough in quantum noise characterization in quantum systems—a key step toward reliably managing errors in quantum computing.

Their findings, published in Physical Review Letters, make important strides in addressing a long-standing obstacle to developing useful quantum computers.

Noise in quantum systems can come from traditional sources, like temperature swings, vibration, and electrical interference, as well as from atomic-level activity, like spin and magnetic fields, associated with quantum processing.

If Quantum Computing Is Solving “Impossible” Questions, How Do We Know They’re Right?

A new Swinburne study is addressing a core paradox: if quantum computing is solving problems that cannot be checked by conventional methods, how can we be certain the results are correct? Quantum computing has the potential to tackle problems once thought unsolvable in areas including physics, me

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