27 research outputs found
Phase separation and pair condensation in a spin-imbalanced 2D Fermi gas
We study a two-component quasi-two-dimensional Fermi gas with imbalanced spin
populations. We probe the gas at different interaction strengths and
polarizations by measuring the density of each spin component in the trap and
the pair momentum distribution after time of flight. For a wide range of
experimental parameters, we observe in-trap phase separation characterized by
the appearance of a spin-balanced condensate surrounded by a polarized gas. Our
momentum space measurements indicate pair condensation in the imbalanced gas
even for large polarizations where phase separation vanishes, pointing to the
presence of a polarized pair condensate. Our observation of zero momentum pair
condensates in 2D spin-imbalanced gases opens the way to explorations of more
exotic superfluid phases that occupy a large part of the phase diagram in lower
dimensions
Probing quench dynamics across a quantum phase transition into a 2D Ising antiferromagnet
Simulating the real-time evolution of quantum spin systems far out of
equilibrium poses a major theoretical challenge, especially in more than one
dimension. We experimentally explore the dynamics of a two-dimensional Ising
spin system with transverse and longitudinal fields as we quench it across a
quantum phase transition from a paramagnet to an antiferromagnet. We realize
the system with a near unit-occupancy atomic array of over 200 atoms obtained
by loading a spin-polarized band insulator of fermionic lithium into an optical
lattice and induce short-range interactions by direct excitation to a low-lying
Rydberg state. Using site-resolved microscopy, we probe the correlations in the
system after a sudden quench from the paramagnetic state and compare our
measurements to exact calculations in the regime where it is possible. We
achieve many-body states with longer-range antiferromagnetic correlations by
implementing a near-adiabatic quench and study the buildup of correlations as
we cross the quantum phase transition at different rates
Magneto-Optical Trapping and Sub-Doppler Cooling of a Polyatomic Molecule
We report magneto-optical trapping (MOT) of a polyatomic molecule, calcium
monohydroxide (CaOH). The MOT contains CaOH molecules at a
peak density of cm. CaOH molecules are further
sub-Doppler laser cooled in an optical molasses, to a temperature of 110(4)
K. The temperatures and densities achieved here make CaOH a viable
candidate for a wide variety of quantum science applications, including the
creation of optical tweezer arrays of CaOH molecules. This work also suggests
that laser cooling and magneto-optical trapping of many other polyatomic
species will be both feasible and practical.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Probing the limits of optical cycling in a predissociative diatomic molecule
Molecular predissociation is the spontaneous, nonradiative bond breaking
process that can occur upon excitation. In the context of laser cooling,
predissociation is an unwanted consequence of molecular structure that limits
the ability to scatter a large number of photons required to reach the
ultracold regime. Unlike rovibrational branching, predissociation is
irreversible since the fragments fly apart with high kinetic energy. Of
particular interest is the simple diatomic molecule, CaH, for which the two
lowest electronically excited states used in laser cooling lie above the
dissociation threshold of the ground potential. In this work, we present
measurements and calculations that quantify the predissociation probabilities
affecting the cooling cycle. The results allow us to design a laser cooling
scheme that will enable the creation of an ultracold and optically trapped
cloud of CaH molecules. In addition, we use the results to propose a two-photon
pathway to controlled dissociation of the molecules, in order to gain access to
their ultracold fragments, including hydrogen.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure
Direct Laser Cooling of a Symmetric Top Molecule
We report direct laser cooling of a symmetric top molecule, reducing the
transverse temperature of a beam of calcium monomethoxide (CaOCH) to
mK while addressing two distinct nuclear spin isomers. These
results open a path to efficient production of ultracold chiral molecules and
conclusively demonstrate that by using proper rovibronic optical transitions,
both photon cycling and laser cooling of complex molecules can be as efficient
as for much simpler linear species
Bad metallic transport in a cold atom Fermi-Hubbard system
Charge transport is a revealing probe of the quantum properties of materials.
Strong interactions can blur charge carriers resulting in a poorly understood
"quantum soup". Here we study the conductivity of the Fermi-Hubbard model, a
testing ground for strong interaction physics, in a clean quantum system -
ultracold Li in a 2D optical lattice. We determine the charge diffusion
constant in our system by measuring the relaxation of an imposed density
modulation and modeling its decay hydrodynamically. The diffusion constant is
converted to a resistivity, which exhibits a linear temperature dependence and
exceeds the Mott-Ioffe-Regel limit, two characteristic signatures of a bad
metal. The techniques we develop here may be applied to measurements of other
transport quantities, including the optical conductivity and thermopower