23 research outputs found
A Multi-path Interferometer with Ultracold Atoms Trapped in an Optical Lattice
We study an ultra-cold gas of bosons trapped in a one dimensional
-site optical lattice perturbed by a spatially dependent potential , where the unknown coupling strength is to be estimated. We find that
the measurement uncertainty is bounded by .
For a typical case of a linear potential, the sensitivity improves as ,
which is a result of multiple interferences between the sites -- an advantage
of multi-path interferometers over the two-mode setups. Next, we calculate the
estimation sensitivity for a specific measurement where, after the action of
the potential, the particles are released from the lattice and form an
interference pattern. If the parameter is estimated by a least-square fit of
the average density to the interference pattern, the sensitivity still scales
like for linear potentials and can be further improved by preparing a
properly correlated initial state in the lattice.Comment: 11 pages, 3 fugire
Raman scattering of atoms from a quasi-condensate in a perturbative regime
It is demonstrated that measurements of positions of atoms scattered from a
quasi-condensate in a Raman process provide information on the temperature of
the parent cloud. In particular, the widths of the density and second order
correlation functions are sensitive to the phase fluctuations induced by
non-zero temperature of the quasi-condensate. It is also shown how these widths
evolve during expansion of the cloud of scattered atoms. These results are
useful for planning future Raman scattering experiments and indicate the degree
of spatial resolution of atom-position measurements necessary to detect the
temperature dependence of the quasi-condensate.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Tradeoffs for number-squeezing in collisions of Bose-Einstein condensates
We investigate the factors that influence the usefulness of supersonic
collisions of Bose-Einstein condensates as a potential source of entangled
atomic pairs by analyzing the reduction of the number difference fluctuations
between regions of opposite momenta. We show that non-monochromaticity of the
mother clouds is typically the leading limitation on number squeezing, and that
the squeezing becomes less robust to this effect as the density of pairs grows.
We develop a simple model that explains the relationship between density
correlations and the number squeezing, allows one to estimate the squeezing
from properties of the correlation peaks, and shows how the multi-mode nature
of the scattering must be taken into account to understand the behavior of the
pairing. We analyze the impact of the Bose enhancement on the number squeezing,
by introducing a simplified low-gain model. We conclude that as far as
squeezing is concerned the preferable configuration occurs when atoms are
scattered not uniformly but rather into two well separated regions.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures, final versio
Enhancing interferometric sensitivity by non-classical light from quantum non-demolition measurements in cavity QED
We propose an enhanced optical interferometer based on tailored non-classical
light generated by nonlinear dynamics and projective measurements in a
three-level atom cavity QED system. A coherent state in the cavity becomes
dynamically entangled with two ground states of the atom and is transformed to
a macroscopic superposition state via a projective measurement on the atom. We
show that the resulting highly non-classical state can improve interferometric
precision measurements well beyond the shot-noise limit once combined with a
classical laser pulse at the input of a Mach-Zehnder interferometer. For a
practical implementation, we identify an efficient phase shift estimation
scheme based on the counting of photons at the interferometer output. Photon
losses and photon-counting errors deteriorate the interferometer sensitivity,
but we demonstrate that it still can be significantly better than the
shot-noise limit under realistic conditions.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure