Publications by authors named "Sengstock K"

Article Synopsis
  • Imaging is crucial for understanding physical systems at the microscopic level, with new techniques revealing novel phenomena.
  • Ultracold atoms in optical lattices face limitations from diffraction, high optical density, and restricted depth of focus, making them primarily useful for 2D systems.
  • A new imaging method utilizes matter wave optics to enhance density distribution visibility in 3D systems, allowing for detailed manipulation and insight into quantum many-body phenomena, paving the way for advanced studies in this field.
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Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs) in free fall constitute a promising source for space-borne interferometry. Indeed, BECs enjoy a slowly expanding wave function, display a large spatial coherence and can be engineered and probed by optical techniques. Here we explore matter-wave fringes of multiple spinor components of a BEC released in free fall employing light-pulses to drive Bragg processes and induce phase imprinting on a sounding rocket.

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Article Synopsis
  • Plasma dynamics relies heavily on controlled experiments to validate theoretical models, as density and temperature are key factors.
  • An ultracold plasma is formed by ionizing atoms in a Rb Bose-Einstein condensate using a femtosecond laser pulse, creating a strongly coupled plasma in a unique regime.
  • The study observes rapid electron cooling in this setup, with temperatures decreasing from 5250 K to below 10 K in under 500 ns, showcasing a cooling rate of 400 K per picosecond.
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We present a novel locking scheme for active length-stabilization and frequency detuning of a cavity optomechanical device based on the optical spring effect. The error signal is generated by utilizing the position measurement of a thermally driven intra-cavity nanomechanical device and employing its detuning-dependent frequency shift caused by the dispersive coupling to the cavity field. The scheme neither requires external modulation of the laser or the cavity nor does it demand for additional error signal readout, rendering its technical implementation rather simple for a large variety of existing optomechanical devices.

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We present an optical element for the separation of superimposed beams that only differ in angle. The beams are angularly resolved and separated by total internal reflection at an air gap between two prisms. As a showcase application, we demonstrate the separation of superimposed beams of different diffraction orders directly behind acousto-optic modulators for an operating wavelength of 800 nm.

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Integer-valued topological indices, characterizing nonlocal properties of quantum states of matter, are known to directly predict robust physical properties of equilibrium systems. The Chern number, e.g.

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Owing to the low-gravity conditions in space, space-borne laboratories enable experiments with extended free-fall times. Because Bose-Einstein condensates have an extremely low expansion energy, space-borne atom interferometers based on Bose-Einstein condensation have the potential to have much greater sensitivity to inertial forces than do similar ground-based interferometers. On 23 January 2017, as part of the sounding-rocket mission MAIUS-1, we created Bose-Einstein condensates in space and conducted 110 experiments central to matter-wave interferometry, including laser cooling and trapping of atoms in the presence of the large accelerations experienced during launch.

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Topological defects in Bloch bands, such as Dirac points in graphene, and their resulting Berry phases play an important role for the electronic dynamics in solid state crystals. Such defects can arise in systems with a two-atomic basis due to the momentum-dependent coupling of the two sublattice states, which gives rise to a pseudospin texture. The topological defects appear as vortices in the azimuthal phase of this pseudospin texture.

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Magnetically tunable Feshbach resonances are an indispensable tool for experiments with atomic quantum gases. We report on 37 thus far unpublished Feshbach resonances and four further probable Feshbach resonances in spin mixtures of ultracold fermionic K with temperatures well below 100 nK. In particular, we locate a broad resonance at = 389.

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We describe the construction of an apparatus designed to realize a hybrid quantum system comprised of a cryogenically cooled mechanical oscillator and ultra-cold Rb atoms coupled via light. The outstanding feature of our instrument is an in situ adjustable asymmetric all-fiber membrane-in-the-middle cavity located inside an ultra-high vacuum dilution refrigerator based cryostat. We show that Bose-Einstein condensates of N=2×10 atoms can be produced in less than 20 s and demonstrate a single photon optomechanical coupling strength of g=2π×9 kHz employing a high-stress SiN membrane with a mechanical quality factor Q>10 at a cavity setup temperature of T = 480 mK.

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Topological properties lie at the heart of many fascinating phenomena in solid-state systems such as quantum Hall systems or Chern insulators. The topology of the bands can be captured by the distribution of Berry curvature, which describes the geometry of the eigenstates across the Brillouin zone. Using fermionic ultracold atoms in a hexagonal optical lattice, we engineered the Berry curvature of the Bloch bands using resonant driving and show a full momentum-resolved measurement of the ensuing Berry curvature.

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We employ light-induced double Bragg diffraction of delta-kick collimated Bose-Einstein condensates to create three symmetric Mach-Zehnder interferometers. They rely on (i) first-order, (ii) two successive first-order, and (iii) second-order processes which demonstrate the scalability of the corresponding momentum transfer. With respect to devices based on conventional Bragg scattering, these symmetric interferometers double the scale factor and feature a better suppression of noise and systematic uncertainties intrinsic to the diffraction process.

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We study and realize asymmetric fiber-based cavities with optimized mode match to achieve high reflectivity on resonance. This is especially important for mutually coupling two physical systems via light fields, e.g.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study reveals that correlated pair tunneling causes a phase transition to a twisted superfluid with a complex order parameter, which breaks time-reversal symmetry.
  • It explores the phase diagram of the extended Bose-Hubbard model in a honeycomb optical lattice, identifying various quantum phases such as twisted superfluids and dimerized density-wave insulators.
  • The findings highlight that even small pair-tunneling amplitudes can lead to twisted superfluid phases with strong inter-species correlations, suggesting a spectrum of ground states between supersolid and twisted superfluid.
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  • Operating ultracold quantum gas experiments outside the lab has been difficult due to unstable optical systems.
  • To improve thermal stability, the study explores the use of nonstandard materials like glass ceramics.
  • The Zerodur-based optical systems show high fiber-coupling efficiencies and pass vibration tests, making them suitable for experiments in atom interferometry and other quantum applications in space.
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Collective behavior in many-body systems is the origin of many fascinating phenomena in nature, ranging from the formation of clouds to magnetic properties of solids. We report on the observation of collective spin dynamics in an ultracold Fermi sea with large spin. As a key result, we observed long-lived and large-amplitude coherent spin oscillations driven by local spin interactions.

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We report on the detailed study of multicomponent spin waves in an s=3/2 Fermi gas where the high spin leads to novel tensorial degrees of freedom compared to s=1/2 systems. The excitations of a spin-nematic state are investigated from the linear to the nonlinear regime, where the tensorial character is particularly pronounced. By tuning the initial state we engineer the tensorial spin-wave character, such that the magnitude and the sign of the counterflow spin currents are effectively controlled.

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Optical lattices have developed into a widely used and highly recognized tool to study many-body quantum physics with special relevance for solid state type systems. One of the most prominent reasons for this success is the high degree of tunability in the experimental setups. While at the beginning quasi-static, cubic geometries were mainly explored, the focus of the field has now shifted toward new lattice topologies and the dynamical control of lattice structures.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers have developed a new experimental setup using a 2D-/3D-magneto-optical trap (MOT) to successfully create Bose-Einstein condensates and degenerate Fermi gases from various ytterbium isotopes.
  • The setup eliminates the need for a Zeeman slower, providing an adaptable way to produce ultracold samples of different atomic species simultaneously.
  • This configuration also enhances future experiments in optical lattices due to its excellent optical access.
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Atom interferometers covering macroscopic domains of space-time are a spectacular manifestation of the wave nature of matter. Because of their unique coherence properties, Bose-Einstein condensates are ideal sources for an atom interferometer in extended free fall. In this Letter we report on the realization of an asymmetric Mach-Zehnder interferometer operated with a Bose-Einstein condensate in microgravity.

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We report on the experimental observation of an analog to a persistent alternating photocurrent in an ultracold gas of fermionic atoms in an optical lattice. The dynamics is induced and sustained by an external harmonic confinement. While particles in the excited band exhibit long-lived oscillations with a momentum-dependent frequency, a strikingly different behavior is observed for holes in the lowest band.

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Time-periodic driving like lattice shaking offers a low-demanding method to generate artificial gauge fields in optical lattices. We identify the relevant symmetries that have to be broken by the driving function for that purpose and demonstrate the power of this method by making concrete proposals for its application to two-dimensional lattice systems: We show how to tune frustration and how to create and control band touching points like Dirac cones in the shaken kagome lattice. We propose the realization of a topological and a quantum spin Hall insulator in a shaken spin-dependent hexagonal lattice.

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We present a universal method to create a tunable, artificial vector gauge potential for neutral particles trapped in an optical lattice. The necessary Peierls phase of the hopping parameters between neighboring lattice sites is generated by applying a suitable periodic inertial force such that the method does not rely on any internal structure of the particles. We experimentally demonstrate the realization of such artificial potentials, which generate ground-state superfluids at arbitrary nonzero quasimomentum.

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We perform a detailed experimental study of the band excitations and tunneling properties of ultracold fermions in optical lattices. Employing a novel multiband spectroscopy for fermionic atoms, we can measure the full band structure and tunneling energy with high accuracy. In an attractive Bose-Fermi mixture we observe a significant reduction of the fermionic tunneling energy, which depends on the relative atom numbers.

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We report on a new design of a vacuum ultra violet (VUV) lamp for direct optical excitation of high laying atomic states, e.g., for excitation of metastable rare gas atoms.

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