535 research outputs found

    Probing many-body states of ultra-cold atoms via noise correlations

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    We propose to utilize density-density correlations in the image of an expanding gas cloud to probe complex many body states of trapped ultra-cold atoms. In particular we show how this technique can be used to detect superfluidity of fermionic gases and reveal broken spin symmetries in Mott-states of atoms in optical lattices. The feasibility of the method is investigated by analysis of the relevant signal to noise ratio including experimental imperfections

    Symmetry-protected dissipative preparation of matrix product states

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    We propose and analyze a method for efficient dissipative preparation of matrix product states that exploits their symmetry properties. Specifically, we construct an explicit protocol that makes use of driven-dissipative dynamics to prepare the Affleck-Kennedy-Lieb-Tasaki (AKLT) states, which features symmetry-protected topological order and non-trivial edge excitations. We show that the use of symmetry allows for robust experimental implementation without fine-tuned control parameters. Numerical simulations show that the preparation time scales polynomially in system size nn. Furthermore, we demonstrate that this scaling can be improved to O(log2n)\mathcal{O}(\log^2n) by using parallel preparation of AKLT segments and fusing them via quantum feedback. A concrete scheme using excitation of trapped neutral atoms into Rydberg state via Electromagnetically Induced Transparency is proposed, and generalizations to a broader class of matrix product states are discussed

    Quantum Optics in Maxwell's Fish Eye Lens with Single Atoms and Photons

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    We investigate the quantum optical properties of Maxwell's two-dimensional fish eye lens at the single-photon and single-atom level. We show that such a system mediates effectively infinite-range dipole-dipole interactions between atomic qubits, which can be used to entangle multiple pairs of distant qubits. We find that the rate of the photon exchange between two atoms, which are detuned from the cavity resonances, is well described by a model, where the photon is focused to a diffraction-limited area during absorption. We consider the effect of losses on the system and study the fidelity of the entangling operation via dipole-dipole interaction. We derive our results analytically using perturbation theory and the Born-Markov approximation and then confirm their validity by numerical simulations. We also discuss how the two-dimensional Maxwell's fish eye lens could be realized experimentally using transformational plasmon optics.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figure

    Theory of cavity-assisted microwave cooling of polar molecules

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    We analyze cavity-assisted cooling schemes for polar molecules in the microwave domain, where molecules are excited on a rotational transition and energy is dissipated via strong interactions with a lossy stripline cavity, as recently proposed by A. Andre et al., Nature Physics 2, 636 (2006). We identify the dominant cooling and heating mechanisms in this setup and study cooling rates and final temperatures in various parameter regimes. In particular we analyze the effects of a finite environment temperature on the cooling efficiency, and find minimal temperature and optimized cooling rate in the strong drive regime. Further we discuss the trade-off between efficiency of cavity cooling and robustness with respect to ubiquitous imperfections in a realistic experimental setup, such as anharmonicity of the trapping potential
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