162 research outputs found
Measuring and engineering entropy and spin squeezing in weakly linked Bose-Einstein condensates
We propose a method to infer the single-particle entropy of bosonic atoms in
an optical lattice and to study the local evolution of entropy, spin squeezing,
and entropic inequalities for entanglement detection in such systems. This
method is based on experimentally feasible measurements of
non-nearest-neighbour coherences. We study a specific example of dynamically
controlling atom tunneling between selected sites and show that this could
potentially also improve the metrologically relevant spin squeezing
Implementing quantum electrodynamics with ultracold atomic systems
We discuss the experimental engineering of model systems for the description
of QED in one spatial dimension via a mixture of bosonic Na and
fermionic Li atoms. The local gauge symmetry is realized in an optical
superlattice, using heteronuclear boson-fermion spin-changing interactions
which preserve the total spin in every local collision. We consider a large
number of bosons residing in the coherent state of a Bose-Einstein condensate
on each link between the fermion lattice sites, such that the behavior of
lattice QED in the continuum limit can be recovered. The discussion about the
range of possible experimental parameters builds, in particular, upon
experiences with related setups of fermions interacting with coherent samples
of bosonic atoms. We determine the atomic system's parameters required for the
description of fundamental QED processes, such as Schwinger pair production and
string breaking. This is achieved by benchmark calculations of the atomic
system and of QED itself using functional integral techniques. Our results
demonstrate that the dynamics of one-dimensional QED may be realized with
ultracold atoms using state-of-the-art experimental resources. The experimental
setup proposed may provide a unique access to longstanding open questions for
which classical computational methods are no longer applicable
Classical bifurcation at the transition from Rabi to Josephson dynamics
We report on the experimental realization of an internal bosonic Josephson
junction in a Rubidium spinor Bose-Einstein condensate. The measurement of the
full time dynamics in phase space allows the characterization of the
theoretically predicted -phase modes and quantitatively confirms
analytical predictions, revealing a classical bifurcation. Our results suggest
that this system is a model system which can be tuned from classical to the
quantum regime and thus is an important step towards the experimental
investigation of entanglement generation close to critical points
Nonlinear Self-Trapping of Matter Waves in Periodic Potentials
We report the first experimental observation of nonlinear self-trapping of
Bose-condensed 87Rb atoms in a one dimensional waveguide with a superimposed
deep periodic potential . The trapping effect is confirmed directly by imaging
the atomic spatial distribution. Increasing the nonlinearity we move the system
from the diffusive regime, characterized by an expansion of the condensate, to
the nonlinearity dominated self-trapping regime, where the initial expansion
stops and the width remains finite. The data are in quantitative agreement with
the solutions of the corresponding discrete nonlinear equation. Our results
reveal that the effect of nonlinear self-trapping is of local nature, and is
closely related to the macroscopic self-trapping phenomenon already predicted
for double-well systems.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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