121 research outputs found
Metastable Feshbach Molecules in High Rotational States
We experimentally demonstrate Cs2 Feshbach molecules well above the
dissociation threshold, which are stable against spontaneous decay on the
timescale of one second. An optically trapped sample of ultracold dimers is
prepared in an l-wave state and magnetically tuned into a region with negative
binding energy. The metastable character of these molecules arises from the
large centrifugal barrier in combination with negligible coupling to states
with low rotational angular momentum. A sharp onset of dissociation with
increasing magnetic field is mediated by a crossing with a g-wave dimer state
and facilitates dissociation on demand with a well defined energy.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Optimal trapping wavelengths of Cs molecules in an optical lattice
The present paper aims at finding optimal parameters for trapping of Cs
molecules in optical lattices, with the perspective of creating a quantum
degenerate gas of ground-state molecules. We have calculated dynamic
polarizabilities of Cs molecules subject to an oscillating electric field,
using accurate potential curves and electronic transition dipole moments. We
show that for some particular wavelengths of the optical lattice, called "magic
wavelengths", the polarizability of the ground-state molecules is equal to the
one of a Feshbach molecule. As the creation of the sample of ground-state
molecules relies on an adiabatic population transfer from weakly-bound
molecules created on a Feshbach resonance, such a coincidence ensures that both
the initial and final states are favorably trapped by the lattice light,
allowing optimized transfer in agreement with the experimental observation
Confinement-Induced Resonances in Low-Dimensional Quantum Systems
We report on the observation of confinement-induced resonances in strongly
interacting quantum-gas systems with tunable interactions for one- and
two-dimensional geometry. Atom-atom scattering is substantially modified when
the s-wave scattering length approaches the length scale associated with the
tight transversal confinement, leading to characteristic loss and heating
signatures. Upon introducing an anisotropy for the transversal confinement we
observe a splitting of the confinement-induced resonance. With increasing
anisotropy additional resonances appear. In the limit of a two-dimensional
system we find that one resonance persists.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Preparation and spectroscopy of a metastable Mott insulator state with attractive interactions
We prepare and study a metastable attractive Mott insulator state formed with
bosonic atoms in a three-dimensional optical lattice. Starting from a Mott
insulator with Cs atoms at weak repulsive interactions, we use a magnetic
Feshbach resonance to tune the interactions to large attractive values and
produce a metastable state pinned by attractive interactions with a lifetime on
the order of 10 seconds. We probe the (de-)excitation spectrum via lattice
modulation spectroscopy, measuring the interaction dependence of two- and
three-body bound state energies. As a result of increased on-site three-body
loss we observe resonance broadening and suppression of tunneling processes
that produce three-body occupation.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Inducing Transport in a Dissipation-Free Lattice with Super Bloch Oscillations
Particles in a perfect lattice potential perform Bloch oscillations when
subject to a constant force, leading to localization and preventing
conductivity. For a weakly-interacting Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) of Cs
atoms, we observe giant center-of-mass oscillations in position space with a
displacement across hundreds of lattice sites when we add a periodic modulation
to the force near the Bloch frequency. We study the dependence of these "super"
Bloch oscillations on lattice depth, modulation amplitude, and modulation
frequency and show that they provide a means to induce linear transport in a
dissipation-free lattice. Surprisingly, we find that, for an interacting
quantum system, super Bloch oscillations strongly suppress the appearance of
dynamical instabilities and, for our parameters, increase the phase-coherence
time by more than a factor of hundred.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Realization of an Excited, Strongly-Correlated Quantum Gas Phase
Ultracold atomic physics offers myriad possibilities to study strongly
correlated many-body systems in lower dimensions. Typically, only ground state
phases are accessible. Using a tunable quantum gas of bosonic cesium atoms, we
realize and control in one dimensional geometry a highly excited quantum phase
that is stabilized in the presence of attractive interactions by maintaining
and strengthening quantum correlations across a confinement-induced resonance.
We diagnose the crossover from repulsive to attractive interactions in terms of
the stiffness and the energy of the system. Our results open up the
experimental study of metastable excited many-body phases with strong
correlations and their dynamical properties
Experimental Evidence for Efimov Quantum States
Three interacting particles form a system which is well known for its complex
physical behavior. A landmark theoretical result in few-body quantum physics is
Efimov's prediction of a universal set of weakly bound trimer states appearing
for three identical bosons with a resonant two-body interaction. Surprisingly,
these states even exist in the absence of a corresponding two-body bound state
and their precise nature is largely independent of the particular type of the
two-body interaction potential. Efimov's scenario has attracted great interest
in many areas of physics; an experimental test however has not been achieved.
We report the observation of an Efimov resonance in an ultracold thermal gas of
cesium atoms. The resonance occurs in the range of large negative two-body
scattering lengths and arises from the coupling of three free atoms to an
Efimov trimer. We observe its signature as a giant three-body recombination
loss when the strength of the two-body interaction is varied near a Feshbach
resonance. This resonance develops into a continuum resonance at non-zero
collision energies, and we observe a shift of the resonance position as a
function of temperature. We also report on a minimum in the recombination loss
for positive scattering lengths, indicating destructive interference of decay
pathways. Our results confirm central theoretical predictions of Efimov physics
and represent a starting point from which to explore the universal properties
of resonantly interacting few-body systems.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, Proceedings of ICAP-2006 (Innsbruck
Creating artificial magnetic fields for cold atoms by photon-assisted tunneling
This paper proposes a simple setup for introducing an artificial magnetic
field for neutral atoms in 2D optical lattices. This setup is based on the
phenomenon of photon-assisted tunneling and involves a low-frequency periodic
driving of the optical lattice. This low-frequency driving does not affect the
electronic structure of the atom and can be easily realized by the same means
which employed to create the lattice. We also address the problem of detecting
this effective magnetic field. In particular, we study the center of mass
wave-packet dynamics, which is shown to exhibit certain features of cyclotron
dynamics of a classical charged particle.Comment: EPL-style, 8 pages, 4 figure
Demonstration of the temporal matter-wave Talbot effect for trapped matter waves
We demonstrate the temporal Talbot effect for trapped matter waves using ultracold atoms in an optical lattice. We investigate the phase evolution of an array of essentially non-interacting matter waves and observe matter-wave collapse and revival in the form of a Talbot interference pattern. By using long expansion times, we image momentum space with sub-recoil resolution, allowing us to observe fractional Talbot fringes up to tenth order
Spectroscopy of Ultracold, Trapped Cesium Feshbach Molecules
We explore the rich internal structure of Cs_2 Feshbach molecules. Pure
ultracold molecular samples are prepared in a CO_2-laser trap, and a multitude
of weakly bound states is populated by elaborate magnetic-field ramping
techniques. Our methods use different Feshbach resonances as input ports and
various internal level crossings for controlled state transfer. We populate
higher partial-wave states of up to eight units of rotational angular momentum
(l-wave states). We investigate the molecular structure by measurements of the
magnetic moments for various states. Avoided level crossings between different
molecular states are characterized through the changes in magnetic moment and
by a Landau-Zener tunneling method. Based on microwave spectroscopy, we present
a precise measurement of the magnetic-field dependent binding energy of the
weakly bound s-wave state that is responsible for the large background
scattering length of Cs. This state is of particular interest because of its
quantum-halo character.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, 4 table
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