UPC seminar "Quantum Gas Magnifier for accessing new regimes with ultracold atoms
Luca Asteria
- https://fa.upc.edu/es/eventos/upc-seminar-quantum-gas-magnifier-for-accessing-new-regimes-with-ultracold-atoms
- UPC seminar "Quantum Gas Magnifier for accessing new regimes with ultracold atoms
- 2022-10-04T11:30:00+02:00
- 2022-10-04T12:30:00+02:00
- Luca Asteria
04/10/2022 de 11:30 a 12:30 (Europe/Madrid / UTC200)
UPC campus nord, B4-212 (aula seminari)
SEMINAR+WEBINAR ANNOUNCEMENT
Tuesday, 4th of October 2022 at 11:30
UPC campus nord, B4-212 (aula seminari)
https://meet.google.com/whq-mkve-aja
Luca Asteria
Hamburg University
“Quantum Gas Magnifier for accessing new regimes with ultracold atoms”
Abstract
In this contribution we present results on quantum gas magnification as a microscopy tool for ultracold atoms in optical lattices. We developed a matter wave optics protocol which magnifies the atomic density distribution by almost two orders of magnitude [1], allowing to image the magnified cloud in a single-shot and with sub-lattice resolution by using standard optical imaging techniques. This approach works with 3D systems with many particles per lattice site, because it does not have the limitations of a small depth of focus and of light induced collisions. We demonstrate sub-lattice resolution by observing the dynamics within the lattice sites after a lattice potential quench, and we realize single-site addressing using magnetic resonance techniques.
We also report on a novel phenomenon that occurs in the regime of many particles per lattice site when introducing a strong force into the system; this makes the correlated tunneling of pairs of atoms the relevant dynamical process and causes the spontaneous formation of a density wave [2]. Quantum gas magnification opens the path for spatially resolved studies of new quantum many-body regimes, like e.g. 3D systems, systems with high occupation numbers, orbital lattices, and lattice geometries with smaller lattice spacing.
[1] L. Asteria et al., Nature 599, 571-575 (2021)
[2] H. P. Zahn et al., PRX 12, 021014 (2022)
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