Two nearby atoms build up correlations due to two fundamentally different effects: individual interactions with the same vacuum fluctuations, and photon exchange. It is normally assumed that only the total effect is experimentally observable, and not the two individual contributions. Here, the authors challenge this in an experiment using an electro-optic analogue of Fermi’s two atoms setup.
- Alexa Herter
- Frieder Lindel
- Jérôme Faist