125 research outputs found
Dynamic optical superlattices with topological bands
We introduce an all-optical approach to producing high-flux synthetic
magnetic fields for neutral atoms or molecules by designing intrinsically
time-periodic optical superlattices. A single laser source, modulated to
generate two frequencies, suffices to create dynamically modulated interference
patterns which have topological Floquet energy bands. In particular, we propose
a simple laser setup that realizes a tight-binding model with uniform flux per
plaquette and well-separated Chern bands. Our method relies only on the
particles' scalar polarizability and far detuned light.Comment: 5 pages main text + 2 pages supplementary material; published versio
Economic Cost Analysis of West Nile Virus Outbreak, Sacramento County, California, USA, 2005
Aerial spraying is cost-effective
Collective state measurement of mesoscopic ensembles with single-atom resolution
For mesoscopic ensembles containing 100 or more atoms we measure the total
atom number and the number of atoms in a specific hyperfine state with
single-atom resolution. The measurement detects the atom-induced shift of the
resonance frequency of an optical cavity containing the ensemble. This work
extends the range of cavity-based detection with single-atom resolution by more
than an order of magnitude in atom number, and provides the readout capability
necessary for Heisenberg-limited interferometry with atomic ensembles.Comment: 5 pages, 4 pdf figure
A linear AC trap for polar molecules in their ground state
Contains fulltext :
98810.pdf (preprint version ) (Open Access
Threshold Photoelectron Spectrum of Cyclobutadiene: Comparison with Time-Dependent Wavepacket Simulations
The C4H4 isomer cyclobutadiene (CBD) is the prime model for antiaromaticity and thus a molecule of considerable interest in chemistry. Because it is highly reactive, it can only be studied under isolated conditions. Its electronic structure is characterized by a pseudo-Jahn–Teller effect in the neutral and a E ⊗ β Jahn–Teller effect in the cation. As a result, recording photoelectron spectra as well as describing them theoretically has been challenging. Here we present the photoion mass-selected threshold photoelectron spectrum of cyclobutadiene together with a simulation based on time-dependent wavepacket dynamics that includes vibronic coupling in the ion, taking into account eight vibrational modes in the cation. Excellent agreement between theory and experiment is found, and the ionization energy is revised to 8.06 ± 0.02 eV
Integrable and Chaotic Dynamics of Spins Coupled to an Optical Cavity
We show that a class of random all-to-all spin models, realizable in systems of atoms coupled to an optical cavity, gives rise to a rich dynamical phase diagram due to the pairwise separable nature of the couplings. By controlling the experimental parameters, one can tune between integrable and chaotic dynamics on the one hand and between classical and quantum regimes on the other hand. For two special values of a spin-anisotropy parameter, the model exhibits rational Gaudin-type integrability, and it is characterized by an extensive set of spin-bilinear integrals of motion, independent of the spin size. More generically, we find a novel integrable structure with conserved charges that are not purely bilinear. Instead, they develop "dressing tails" of higher-body terms, reminiscent of the dressed local integrals of motion found in many-body localized phases. Surprisingly, this new type of integrable dynamics found in finite-size spin-1/2 systems disappears in the large-S limit, giving way to classical chaos. We identify parameter regimes for characterizing these different dynamical behaviors in realistic experiments, in view of the limitations set by cavity dissipation
Fast cavity-enhanced atom detection with low noise and high fidelity
Cavity quantum electrodynamics describes the fundamental interactions between
light and matter, and how they can be controlled by shaping the local
environment. For example, optical microcavities allow high-efficiency detection
and manipulation of single atoms. In this regime fluctuations of atom number
are on the order of the mean number, which can lead to signal fluctuations in
excess of the noise on the incident probe field. Conversely, we demonstrate
that nonlinearities and multi-atom statistics can together serve to suppress
the effects of atomic fluctuations when making local density measurements on
clouds of cold atoms. We measure atom densities below 1 per cavity mode volume
near the photon shot-noise limit. This is in direct contrast to previous
experiments where fluctuations in atom number contribute significantly to the
noise. Atom detection is shown to be fast and efficient, reaching fidelities in
excess of 97% after 10 us and 99.9% after 30 us.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, 1 table; extensive changes to format and
discussion according to referee comments; published in Nature Communications
with open acces
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