Observation of atomic Fock state interference using light scattering
ORAL
Abstract
This lack of Bragg enhancement is ideal to study the coherence properties of a single atom light scattering, the atom number fluctuation over the lattice sites etc. As a initial test, we verify the mean field theory of superfluid-Mott insulator transition and Kibble-Zurek mechanism during non-adiabatic ramping process in a 3D lattice.
More interestingly, we find an oscillation of light scattering amplitude due to the interference effect between identical atoms in Fock states. To observe this quantum statistical effect, we turn off the one vertical lattice along the observation angle for various one-dimensional time-of-flight duration to allow wave packets to overlap. Atomic wave packet pairs in neighboring sites interfere with each other and show constructive or destructive interference (fluorescence strength) as we vary the TOF duration. Since the light scattering experiment is effectively a correlation measurement, intensity signal from all these pairs are additive, despite the fact that Fock states have random phases. Our experiment can be interpreted as a near-field HBT experiment. Due to their different quantum statistics, we could observe opposite oscillation phase for fermionic and bosonic isotopes of dysprosium.
*We acknowledge support from the NSF through grant No. PHY-2208004, from the Center for Ultracold Atoms (an NSF Physics Frontiers Center) through grant No. PHY-2317134, the Army Research Office (contract No. W911NF2410218) and from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Grant No. W911NF2010090). The dysprosium experiment is supported by a Vannevar-Bush Faculty Fellowship (grant no. N00014-23-1-2873), from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation GBMF ID # 12405), and DARPA (award HR0011-23-2-0038). Yoo Kyung Lee is supported in part by the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship under Grant No.1745302. Yoo Kyung Lee and Hanzhen Lin acknowledge the MathWorks Science Fellowship. Yu-Kun Lu is supported by the NTT Research Fellowship.
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Presenters
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Jiahao Lyu
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- MIT, Department of Physics