Bounds on collapse models from cold-atom experiments
Abstract
The spontaneous localization mechanism of collapse models induces a Brownian motion in all physical systems. This effect is very weak, but experimental progress in creating ultracold atomic systems can be used to detect it. In this paper, we considered a recent experiment (Kovachy et al., 2015), where an atomic ensemble was cooled down to picokelvins. Any Brownian motion induces an extra increase of the position variance of the gas. We study this effect by solving the dynamical equations for the Continuous Spontaneous Localizations (CSL) model, as well as for its non-Markovian and dissipative extensions. The resulting bounds, with a 95 % of confidence level, are beaten only by measurements of spontaneous X-ray emission and by experiments with cantilever (in the latter case, only for rC ≥ 10-7 m, where rC is one of the two collapse parameters of the CSL model). We show that, contrary to the bounds given by X-ray measurements, non-Markovian effects do not change the bounds, for any reasonable choice of a frequency cutoff in the spectrum of the collapse noise. Therefore the bounds here considered are more robust. We also show that dissipative effects are unimportant for a large spectrum of temperatures of the noise, while for low temperatures the excluded region in the parameter space is the more reduced, the lower the temperature.
- Publication:
-
Physica A Statistical Mechanics and its Applications
- Pub Date:
- November 2016
- DOI:
- 10.1016/j.physa.2016.06.134
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1605.01891
- Bibcode:
- 2016PhyA..462..764B
- Keywords:
-
- Measurement problem;
- Collapse models;
- Cold Bose gases;
- Experimental bounds;
- Quantum Physics
- E-Print:
- 16 pages, 14 figures