674 research outputs found
Dynamic Matter-Wave Pulse Shaping
In this paper we discuss possibilities to manipulate a matter-wave with
time-dependent potentials. Assuming a specific setup on an atom chip, we
explore how one can focus, accelerate, reflect, and stop an atomic wave packet,
with, for example, electric fields from an array of electrodes. We also utilize
this method to initiate coherent splitting. Special emphasis is put on the
robustness of the control schemes. We begin with the wave packet of a single
atom, and extend this to a BEC, in the Gross-Pitaevskii picture. In analogy to
laser pulse shaping with its wide variety of applications, we expect this work
to form the base for additional time-dependent potentials eventually leading to
matter-wave pulse shaping with numerous application
Programmable trap geometries with superconducting atom chips
We employ the hysteretic behavior of a superconducting thin film in the
remanent state to generate different traps and flexible magnetic potentials for
ultra-cold atoms. The trap geometry can be programmed by externally applied
fields. This new approach for atom-optics is demonstrated by three different
trap types realized on a single micro-structure: a Z-type trap, a double trap
and a bias field free trap. Our studies show that superconductors in the
remanent state provide a new versatile platform for atom-optics and
applications in ultra-cold quantum gases
Organized Current Patterns in Disordered Conductors
We present a general theory of current deviations in straight current
carrying wires with random imperfections, which quantitatively explains the
recent observations of organized patterns of magnetic field corrugations above
micron-scale evaporated wires. These patterns originate from the most efficient
electron scattering by Fourier components of the wire imperfections with
wavefronts along the direction. We show that long range
effects of surface or bulk corrugations are suppressed for narrow wires or
wires having an electrically anisotropic resistivity
Majorana spin-flip transitions in a magnetic trap
Atoms confined in a magnetic trap can escape by making spin-flip Majorana
transitions due to a breakdown of the adiabatic approximation. Several papers
have studied this process for atoms with spin or . The present
paper calculates the escape rate for atoms with spin . This problem has
new features because the perturbation which allows atoms to escape
satisfies a selection rule and multi-step
processes contribute in leading order. When the adiabatic approximation is
satisfied the leading order terms can be summed to yield a simple expression
for the escape rate.Comment: 16page
Optimal quantum control of Bose Einstein condensates in magnetic microtraps
Transport of Bose-Einstein condensates in magnetic microtraps, controllable
by external parameters such as wire currents or radio-frequency fields, is
studied within the framework of optimal control theory (OCT). We derive from
the Gross-Pitaevskii equation the optimality system for the OCT fields that
allow to efficiently channel the condensate between given initial and desired
states. For a variety of magnetic confinement potentials we study transport and
wavefunction splitting of the condensate, and demonstrate that OCT allows to
drastically outperfrom more simple schemes for the time variation of the
microtrap control parameters.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
An atom fiber for guiding cold neutral atoms
We present an omnidirectional matter wave guide on an atom chip. The
rotational symmetry of the guide is maintained by a combination of two current
carrying wires and a bias field pointing perpendicular to the chip surface. We
demonstrate guiding of thermal atoms around more than two complete turns along
a spiral shaped 25mm long curved path (curve radii down to 200m) at
various atom--surface distances (35-450m). An extension of the scheme for
the guiding of Bose-Einstein condensates is outlined
Atom chips with two-dimensional electron gases: theory of near surface trapping and ultracold-atom microscopy of quantum electronic systems
We show that current in a two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) can trap
ultracold atoms m away with orders of magnitude less spatial noise than
a metal trapping wire. This enables the creation of hybrid systems, which
integrate ultracold atoms with quantum electronic devices to give extreme
sensitivity and control: for example, activating a single quantized conductance
channel in the 2DEG can split a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) for atom
interferometry. In turn, the BEC offers unique structural and functional
imaging of quantum devices and transport in heterostructures and graphene.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, minor change
Quantum glass phases in the disordered Bose-Hubbard model
The phase diagram of the Bose-Hubbard model in the presence of off-diagonal
disorder is determined using Quantum Monte Carlo simulations. A sequence of
quantum glass phases intervene at the interface between the Mott insulating and
the Superfluid phases of the clean system. In addition to the standard Bose
glass phase, the coexistence of gapless and gapped regions close to the Mott
insulating phase leads to a novel Mott glass regime which is incompressible yet
gapless. Numerical evidence for the properties of these phases is given in
terms of global (compressibility, superfluid stiffness) and local
(compressibility, momentum distribution) observables
Optical discrimination between spatial decoherence and thermalization of a massive object
We propose an optical ring interferometer to observe environment-induced
spatial decoherence of massive objects. The object is held in a harmonic trap
and scatters light between degenerate modes of a ring cavity. The output signal
of the interferometer permits to monitor the spatial width of the object's wave
function. It shows oscillations that arise from coherences between energy
eigenstates and that reveal the difference between pure spatial decoherence and
that coinciding with energy transfer and heating. Our method is designed to
work with a wide variety of masses, ranging from the atomic scale to
nano-fabricated structures. We give a thorough discussion of its experimental
feasibility.Comment: 2 figure
Roughness with a finite correlation length in the Microtrap
We analyze the effects of roughness in the magnitude of the magnetic field
produced by a current carrying microwire, which is caused by geometric
fluctuation of the edge of wire. The relation between the fluctuation of the
trapping potential and the height that atom trap lies above the wire is
consistent with the experimental data very well, when the colored noise with a
finite correlation length is considered. On this basis, we generate the random
potential and get the density distribution of the BEC atoms by solving the
Gross-Pitaevskii equation, which coincides well with the experimental image,
especially in the number of fragmentations. The results help us further
understand the nature of the fluctuation and predict the possible application
in the precise measurement.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
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