50 research outputs found
Quantum noise reduction using a cavity with a Bose Einstein condensate
We study an optomechanical system in which the collective density excitations
(Bogoliubov modes) of a Bose Einstein condensate (BEC) is coupled to a cavity
field. We show that the optical force changes the frequency and the damping
constant of the collective density excitations of the BEC. We further analyze
the occurrence of normal mode splitting (NMS) due to mixing of the fluctuations
of the cavity field and the fluctuations of the condensate with finite atomic
two-body interaction. The NMS is found to vanish for small values of the
two-body interaction. We further show that the density excitations of the
condensate can be used to squeeze the output quantum fluctuations of the light
beam. This system may serve as an optomechanical control of quantum
fluctuations using a Bose Einstein condensate.Comment: 8 figure
Fault-Tolerant Dissipative Preparation of Atomic Quantum Registers with Fermions
We propose a fault tolerant loading scheme to produce an array of fermions in
an optical lattice of the high fidelity required for applications in quantum
information processing and the modelling of strongly correlated systems. A cold
reservoir of Fermions plays a dual role as a source of atoms to be loaded into
the lattice via a Raman process and as a heat bath for sympathetic cooling of
lattice atoms. Atoms are initially transferred into an excited motional state
in each lattice site, and then decay to the motional ground state, creating
particle-hole pairs in the reservoir. Atoms transferred into the ground
motional level are no longer coupled back to the reservoir, and doubly occupied
sites in the motional ground state are prevented by Pauli blocking. This scheme
has strong conceptual connections with optical pumping, and can be extended to
load high-fidelity patterns of atoms.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, RevTex
In situ measurement of the dynamic structure factor in ultracold quantum gases
We propose an experimental setup to efficiently measure the dynamic structure
factor of ultracold quantum gases. Our method uses the interaction of the
trapped atomic system with two different cavity modes, which are driven by
external laser fields. By measuring the output fields of the cavity the dynamic
structure factor of the atomic system can be determined. Contrary to previous
approaches the atomic system is not destroyed during the measurement process.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Dissipative dynamics of atomic Hubbard models coupled to a phonon bath:Dark state cooling of atoms within a Bloch band of an optical lattice
We analyse a laser assisted sympathetic cooling scheme for atoms within the lowest Bloch band of an optical lattice. This scheme borrows ideas from sub-recoil laser cooling, implementing them in a new context in which the atoms in the lattice are coupled to a BEC reservoir. In this scheme, excitation of atoms between Bloch bands replaces the internal structure of atoms in normal laser cooling, and spontaneous emission of photons is replaced by creation of excitations in the BEC reservoir. We analyse the cooling process for many bosons and fermions, and obtain possible temperatures corresponding to a small fraction of the Bloch band width within our model. This system can be seen as a novel realisation of a many-body open quantum system
Entangling two Bose Einstein condensates in a double cavity system
We propose a scheme to transfer the quantum state of light fields to the
collective density excitations of a Bose Einstein condensate (BEC) in a cavity.
This scheme allows to entangle two BECs in a double cavity setup by
transferring the quantum entanglement of two light fields produced from a
nondegenerate parametric amplifier (NOPA) to the collective density excitations
of the two BECs. An EPR state of the collective density excitations can be
created by a judicious choice of the system parameters.Comment: 3 figure
Collective decoherence of cold atoms coupled to a Bose-Einstein condensate
We examine the time evolution of cold atoms (impurities) interacting with an
environment consisting of a degenerate bosonic quantum gas. The impurity atoms
differ from the environment atoms, being of a different species. This allows
one to superimpose two independent trapping potentials, each being effective
only on one atomic kind, while transparent to the other. When the environment
is homogeneous and the impurities are confined in a potential consisting of a
set of double wells, the system can be described in terms of an effective
spin-boson model, where the occupation of the left or right well of each site
represents the two (pseudo)-spin states. The irreversible dynamics of such
system is here studied exactly, i.e., not in terms of a Markovian master
equation. The dynamics of one and two impurities is remarkably different in
respect of the standard decoherence of the spin - boson system. In particular
we show: i) the appearance of coherence oscillations, i) the presence of super
and sub decoherent states which differ from the standard ones of the spin boson
model, and iii) the persistence of coherence in the system at long times. We
show that this behaviour is due to the fact that the pseudospins have an
internal spatial structure. We argue that collective decoherence also prompts
information about the correlation length of the environment. In a one
dimensional configuration one can change even stronger the qualitative
behaviour of the dephasing just by tuning the interaction of the bath.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, two references adde
Phonon-induced artificial magnetic fields
We investigate the effect of a rotating Bose-Einstein condensate on a system
of immersed impurity atoms trapped by an optical lattice. We analytically show
that for a one-dimensional, ring-shaped setup the coupling of the impurities to
the Bogoliubov phonons of the condensate leads to a non-trivial phase in the
impurity hopping. The presence of this phase can be tested by observing a drift
in the transport properties of the impurities. These results are quantitatively
confirmed by a numerically exact simulation of a two-mode Bose-Hubbard model.
We also give analytical expressions for the occurring phase terms for a
two-dimensional setup. The phase realises an artificial magnetic field and can
for instance be used for the simulation of the quantum Hall effect using atoms
in an optical lattice.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Cavity Assisted Nondestructive Laser Cooling of Atomic Qubits
We analyze two configurations for laser cooling of neutral atoms whose
internal states store qubits. The atoms are trapped in an optical lattice which
is placed inside a cavity. We show that the coupling of the atoms to the damped
cavity mode can provide a mechanism which leads to cooling of the motion
without destroying the quantum information.Comment: 12 page
Quantum stability of self-organized atomic insulator-like states in optical resonators
We investigate a paradigm example of cavity quantum electrodynamics with many
body systems: an ultracold atomic gas inside a pumped optical resonator. In
particular, we study the stability of atomic insulator-like states, confined by
the mechanical potential emerging from the cavity field spatial mode structure.
As in open space, when the optical potential is sufficiently deep, the atomic
gas is in the Mott-like state. Inside the cavity, however, the potential
depends on the atomic distribution, which determines the refractive index of
the medium, thus altering the intracavity field amplitude. We derive the
effective Bose-Hubbard model describing the physics of the system in one
dimension and study the crossover between the superfluid -- Mott insulator
quantum states. We determine the regions of parameters where the atomic
insulator states are stable, and predict the existence of overlapping stability
regions corresponding to competing insulator-like states. Bistable behavior,
controlled by the pump intensity, is encountered in the vicinity of the shifted
cavity resonance.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures. Replaced with revised version. Accepted for
publication in New J. Phys., special issue "Quantum correlations in tailord
matter