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Microscopically probing quantum many-body systems by resolving their constituent particles is essential for understanding quantum matter. In most physical systems, distinguishing individual particles, such as electrons in solids, or neutrons and quarks in neutron stars, is impossible. Atombased quantum simulators offer a unique platform that enables the imaging of each particle in a many-body system. Until now, however, this capability has been limited to quantum systems in discretized space such as optical lattices and tweezers, where spatial degrees of freedom are quantized. Here, we introduce a novel method for imaging atomic quantum many-body systems in the continuum, allowing for in situ resolution of every particle. We demonstrate the capabilities of our approach on a two-dimensional atomic Fermi gas. We probe the density correlation functions, resolving their full spatial functional form, and reveal the shape of the Fermi hole arising from Pauli exclusion as a function of temperature. Our method opens the door to probing strongly-correlated quantum gases in the continuum with unprecedented spatial resolution, providing in situ access to spatially resolved correlation functions of arbitrarily high order across the entire system.
In the absence of external forcing, all trajectories on the phase plane of the van der Pol oscillator tend to a closed, periodic, trajectory -- the limit cycle -- after infinite time. Here, we drive the van der Pol oscillator with an external time-dependent force to reach the limit cycle in a given finite time. Specifically, we are interested in minimising the non-conservative contribution to the work when driving the system from a given initial point on the phase plane to any final point belonging to the limit cycle. There appears a speed limit inequality, which expresses a trade-off between the connection time and cost -- in terms of the non-conservative work. We show how the above results can be { generalized to the broader family of non-linear oscillators given by} the Liénard equation. Finally, we also look into the problem of minimising the total work done by the external force.
The dynamics of a system composed of elastic hard particles confined by an isotropic harmonic potential are studied. In the low-density limit, the Boltzmann equation provides an excellent description, and the system does not reach equilibrium except for highly specific initial conditions: it generically evolves toward and stays in a breathing mode. This state is periodic in time, with a Gaussian velocity distribution, an oscillating temperature, and a density profile that oscillates as well. We characterize this breather in terms of initial conditions and constants of the motion. For low but finite densities, the analysis requires taking into account the finite size of the particles. Under well-controlled approximations, a closed description is provided, which shows how equilibrium is reached at long times. The (weak) dissipation at work erodes the breather's amplitude, while concomitantly shifting its oscillation frequency. An excellent agreement is found between molecular dynamics simulation results and the theoretical predictions for the frequency shift. For the damping time, the agreement is not as accurate as for the frequency and the origin of the discrepancies is discussed.
The effective control of atomic coherence with cold atoms has made atom interferometry an essential tool for quantum sensors and precision measurements. The performance of these interferometers is closely related to the operation of large wave packet separations. We present here a novel approach for atomic beam splitters based on the stroboscopic stabilization of quantum states in an accelerated optical lattice. The corresponding Floquet state is generated by optimal control protocols. In this way, we demonstrate an unprecedented Large Momentum Transfer (LMT) interferometer, with a momentum separation of 600 photon recoils ($600\hbar k$) between its two arms. Each LMT beam splitter is realized in a remarkably short time (2 ms) and is highly robust against the initial velocity dispersion of the wave packet and lattice depth fluctuations. Our study shows that Floquet engineering is a promising tool for exploring new frontiers in quantum physics at large scales, with applications in quantum sensing and testing fundamental physics.
The monochromatic driving of a quantum system is a successful technique in quantum simulations, well captured by an effective Hamiltonian approach, and with applications in artificial gauge fields and topological engineering. Here, we investigate multichromatic Floquet driving for quantum simulation. Within a well-defined range of parameters, we show that the time coarse-grained dynamics of such a driven closed quantum system is encapsulated in an effective master equation for the time-averaged density matrix, that evolves under the action of an effective Hamiltonian and tunable Lindblad-type dissipation or quantum gain terms. As an application, we emulate the dissipation induced by phase noise and incoherent emission or absorption processes in the bichromatic driving of a two-level system, and reproduce the phase decoherence in a harmonic oscillator model.
Sujets
Atomes ultrafroids dans un réseau optique
Chaos
Couches mono-moléculaire auto assemblées
Onde de matière
Optique atomique
Hamiltonian
Optical lattices
Condensation
Optical
Bose-Einstein
Condensation de bose-Einstein
Microscopie de fluorescence
Réseau optique
Condensats de Bose– Einstein
Periodic potentials
Césium
Experimental results
Ultracold atoms
Diffraction de Bragg
Effet tunnel assisté par le chaos
Phase space
Mélasse optique
Electromagnetic field
Floquet theory
Quantum collisions
Initial state
Maxwell's demon
Gaz quantiques
Optical molasses
Gaz quantique
Optimal control theory
Approximation semi-classique et variationnelle
Effet tunnel
Bose–Einstein condensates
Quantum optimal control
Contrôle optimal quantique
Condensat Bose-Einstein
Quantum
Réseaux optiques
Bose-Einstein condensates
Chaos-assisted tunneling
Masques matériels nanométriques
Puce atomique
Nano-lithography
Condensat de Bose-Einstein
Physique quantique
Dimension
Espace des phases
Bose-Einstein condensates Coherent control Cold atoms and matter waves Cold gases in optical lattices
Condensats de Bose Einstein
Engineering
Fresnel lens
Cold atoms
Contrôle optimal
Optical lattice
Bose Einstein Condensation
Bose Einstein condensate
Jet atomique
Time dependence
Matter wave
Field equations stochastic
Condensats de Bose-Einstein
Atom laser
Fluid
Quantum control
Mirror-magneto-optical trap
Lattice
Optical tweezers
Piège magnéto-optique à miroir
Lentille de Fresnel
Plasmon polariton de surface
Effet rochet
Effet tunnel dynamique
Matter waves
Atomes froids
Numerical methods
Nano-lithographie
Atomic beam
Bragg scattering
Levitodynamics
Bose-Einstein condensate
Collisions ultrafroides
Constraint
Bose-Einstein Condensates
Atom chip
Théorie de Floquet
Quantum chaos
Ouvertures métalliques sub-longueur d'onde
Current
Chaos quantique
Bragg Diffraction
Entropy production
Dynamical tunneling
Mechanics
Non-adiabatic regime
Fluorescence microscopy
Beam splitter
Bose-Einstein Condensate
Atom optics