7,653 research outputs found
Observing collapse in two colliding dipolar Bose-Einstein condensates
We study the collision of two Bose-Einstein condensates with pure dipolar
interaction. A stationary pure dipolar condensate is known to be stable when
the atom number is below a critical value. However, collapse can occur during
the collision between two condensates due to local density fluctuations even if
the total atom number is only a fraction of the critical value. Using full
three-dimensional numerical simulations, we observe the collapse induced by
local density fluctuations. For the purpose of future experiments, we present
the time dependence of the density distribution, energy per particle and the
maximal density of the condensate. We also discuss the collapse time as a
function of the relative phase between the two condensates.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
Aliquoting structure for centrifugal microfluidics based on a new pneumatic valve
We present a new microvalve that can be monolithically integrated in centrifugally driven lab-on-a-chip systems. In contrast to existing operation principles that use hydrophobic patches, geometrically defined capillary stops or siphons, here we present a pneumatic principle. It needs neither additional local coatings nor expensive micro sized geometries. The valve is controlled by the spinning frequency and can be switched to be open when the centrifugal pressure overcomes the pneumatic pressure inside an unvented reaction cavity. We designed and characterized valves ranging in centrifugal burst pressure from 6700 Pa to 2100 Pa. Based on this valving principle we present a new structure for aliquoting of liquids. We experimentally demonstrated this by splitting 105 muL volumes into 16 aliquots with a volume CV of 3 %
Atomic cluster state build up with macroscopic heralding
We describe a measurement-based state preparation scheme for the efficient
build up of cluster states in atom-cavity systems. As in a recent proposal for
the generation of maximally entangled atom pairs [Metz et al., Phys. Rev. Lett.
97, 040503 (2006)], we use an electron shelving technique to avoid the
necessity for the detection of single photons. Instead, the successful fusion
of smaller into larger clusters is heralded by an easy-to-detect macroscopic
fluorescence signal. High fidelities are achieved even in the vicinity of the
bad cavity limit and are essentially independent of the concrete size of the
system parameters.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures; minor changes, mainly clarification
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