Dipolar Quantum Solids in a Quantum Gas Microscope

ORAL

Abstract

We demonstrate dipolar phases of the extended Bose-Hubbard model with an ultracold gas of magnetic Erbium atoms in two dimensions. To create dipolar quantum solids, we adiabatically load a BEC into a small spacing square lattice. When the dipolar interaction becomes dominant we observe a quantum phase transition in which the superfluid order is broken and a solid is formed. We tune the dipole-dipole interactions by rotating the atomic dipole orientation via a bias magnetic field. Depending on this orientation we spontaneously form checkerboard solid or stripe solid phases. We observe these dipolar quantum solids by measuring connected density-density correlation constructed from site-resolved images in our quantum gas microscope. These observations open the gate to site-resolved quantum simulation of lattice models with long-range interactions, such as more exotic phases in the extended Hubbard models like the supersolid phase and the Haldane Insulator phase, as well as dynamics in anisotropic XXZ models.

*U.S. Department of Energy Quantum Systems Accelerator DE-AC02-05CH11231, National Science Foundation Center for Ultracold Atoms PHY-1734011, Army Research Office Defense University Research Instrumentation Program W911NF2010104, Office of Naval Research Vannevar Bush Faculty Fellowship N00014-18-1-2863, and Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Optimization with Noisy Intermediate-Scale Quantum devices W911NF-20-1-0021

Presenters

  • Alexander M Douglas

    • Harvard University

Authors

  • Alexander M Douglas

    • Harvard University
  • Lin Su

    • Harvard University
  • Michal Szurek

    • Harvard University
  • Vassilios Kaxiras

    • Harvard University
  • Ognjen Markovic

    • Harvard University
  • Markus Greiner

    • Harvard University