319 research outputs found

    Data report: logging while drilling data analysis of Leg 171A, a multivariate statistical approach

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    In the northern Barbados accretionary wedge, several Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) and Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) legs (DSDP Leg 78 and ODP Legs 110, 156, and 171A) targeted the décollement and the seaward extension of the décollement, the proto-décollement. During Leg 171A, the logging while drilling (LWD) technique was used to determine the physical properties variations along a profile across the deformation front. Because of the unstable borehole conditions in accretionary wedges, LWD is the most effective method for the measurements of physical properties in these poorly consolidated sediments. LWD data are acquired just above the drill bit a few minutes after the formation has been drilled, yielding measurements as close to in situ conditions as possible. The large amount of LWD data and the demand for a quick, objective, and reliable evaluation calls for the application of multivariate statistical methods. The multivariate factor analysis is a method of reducing the amount of logging data while giving them a new integrated meaning with no loss of important information, resulting in factor logs that are helpful tools for further interpretation. The cluster analysis of the two or three most significant factors proved to be a useful and objective method to identify and confirm significant logging units. The main objective of the application of multivariate statistical methods in this study is twofold. First, Leg 171A was a stand-alone logging leg, where no cores were retrieved. The factor analysis was used as an objective tool for a classification of the drilled sequences based on their physical and chemical properties. The new factor logs mirror the basic processes behind the measured geophysical properties and make them easier to interpret. Second, in the succeeding cluster analysis, similar geophysical properties are grouped into one cluster, reflecting one logging unit. These objectively defined logging units can be compared to statistical electrofacies, which are helpful in differentiating lithologic characterizations. In particular for LWD measurements, the multivariate statistical methods of factor and cluster analysis are helpful tools for a fast, reliable, and objective definition of logging units, which should be considered for future legs

    Two-point density correlations of quasicondensates in free expansion

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    We measure the two-point density correlation function of freely expanding quasicondensates in the weakly interacting quasi-one-dimensional (1D) regime. While initially suppressed in the trap, density fluctuations emerge gradually during expansion as a result of initial phase fluctuations present in the trapped quasicondensate. Asymptotically, they are governed by the thermal coherence length of the system. Our measurements take place in an intermediate regime where density correlations are related to near-field diffraction effects and anomalous correlations play an important role. Comparison with a recent theoretical approach described by Imambekov et al. yields good agreement with our experimental results and shows that density correlations can be used for thermometry of quasicondensates.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, minor change

    Two-point phase correlations of a one-dimensional bosonic Josephson junction

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    We realize a one-dimensional Josephson junction using quantum degenerate Bose gases in a tunable double well potential on an atom chip. Matter wave interferometry gives direct access to the relative phase field, which reflects the interplay of thermally driven fluctuations and phase locking due to tunneling. The thermal equilibrium state is characterized by probing the full statistical distribution function of the two-point phase correlation. Comparison to a stochastic model allows to measure the coupling strength and temperature and hence a full characterization of the system

    Single-particle-sensitive imaging of freely propagating ultracold atoms

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    We present a novel imaging system for ultracold quantum gases in expansion. After release from a confining potential, atoms fall through a sheet of resonant excitation laser light and the emitted fluorescence photons are imaged onto an amplified CCD camera using a high numerical aperture optical system. The imaging system reaches an extraordinary dynamic range, not attainable with conventional absorption imaging. We demonstrate single-atom detection for dilute atomic clouds with high efficiency where at the same time dense Bose-Einstein condensates can be imaged without saturation or distortion. The spatial resolution can reach the sampling limit as given by the 8 \mu m pixel size in object space. Pulsed operation of the detector allows for slice images, a first step toward a 3D tomography of the measured object. The scheme can easily be implemented for any atomic species and all optical components are situated outside the vacuum system. As a first application we perform thermometry on rubidium Bose-Einstein condensates created on an atom chip.Comment: 24 pages, 10 figures. v2: as publishe

    Stochastic optimization of a cold atom experiment using a genetic algorithm

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    We employ an evolutionary algorithm to automatically optimize different stages of a cold atom experiment without human intervention. This approach closes the loop between computer based experimental control systems and automatic real time analysis and can be applied to a wide range of experimental situations. The genetic algorithm quickly and reliably converges to the most performing parameter set independent of the starting population. Especially in many-dimensional or connected parameter spaces the automatic optimization outperforms a manual search.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    A single atom detector integrated on an atom chip: fabrication, characterization and application

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    We describe a robust and reliable fluorescence detector for single atoms that is fully integrated into an atom chip. The detector allows spectrally and spatially selective detection of atoms, reaching a single atom detection efficiency of 66%. It consists of a tapered lensed single-mode fiber for precise delivery of excitation light and a multi-mode fiber to collect the fluorescence. The fibers are mounted in lithographically defined holding structures on the atom chip. Neutral 87Rb atoms propagating freely in a magnetic guide are detected and the noise of their fluorescence emission is analyzed. The variance of the photon distribution allows to determine the number of detected photons / atom and from there the atom detection efficiency. The second order intensity correlation function of the fluorescence shows near-perfect photon anti-bunching and signs of damped Rabi-oscillations. With simple improvements one can boost the detection efficiency to > 95%.Comment: 24 pages, 11 figure

    Matter-wave recombiners fro trapped Bose-Einstein condensates

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    Interferometry with trapped atomic Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs) requires the development of techniques to recombine the two paths of the interferometer and map the accumulated phase difference to a measurable atom number difference. We have implemented and compared two recombining procedures in a double-well-based BEC interferometer. The first procedure utilizes the bosonic Josephson effect and controlled tunneling of atoms through the potential barrier, similar to laser light in an optical fiber coupler. The second one relies on the interference of the reflected and transmitted parts of the BEC wave function when impinging on the potential barrier, analogous to light impinging on a half-silvered mirror. Both schemes were implemented successfully, yielding an interferometric contrast of similar to 20% and 42% respectively. Building efficient matter-wave recombiners represents an important step towards the coherent manipulation of external quantum superposition states of BECs

    Extracting density-density correlations from in situ images of atomic quantum gases

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    We present a complete recipe to extract the density-density correlations and the static structure factor of a two-dimensional (2D) atomic quantum gas from in situ imaging. Using images of non-interacting thermal gases, we characterize and remove the systematic contributions of imaging aberrations to the measured density-density correlations of atomic samples. We determine the static structure factor and report results on weakly interacting 2D Bose gases, as well as strongly interacting gases in a 2D optical lattice. In the strongly interacting regime, we observe a strong suppression of the static structure factor at long wavelengths.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure

    Sub shot-noise interferometry from measurements of the one-body density

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    We derive the asymptotic maximum-likelihood phase estimation uncertainty for any interferometric protocol where the positions of the probe particles are measured to infer the phase, but where correlations between the particles are not accessible. First, we apply our formula to the estimation of the phase acquired in the Mach-Zehnder interferometer and recover the well-know momentum formula for the phase sensitivity. Then, we apply our results to interferometers with two spatially separated modes, which could be implemented with a Bose-Einstein condensate trapped in a double-well potential. We show that in a simple protocol which estimates the phase from an interference pattern a sub shot-noise phase uncertainty of up to ΔθN2/3\Delta\theta\propto N^{-2/3} can be achieved. One important property of this estimation protocol is that its sensitivity does not depend on the value of the phase θ\theta, contrary to the sensitivity given by the momentum formula for the Mach-Zehnder transformation. Finally, we study the experimental implementation of the above protocol in detail, by numerically simulating the full statistics as well as by considering the main sources of detection noise, and argue that the shot-noise limit could be surpassed with current technology.Comment: 19 pages. 4 figure
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