Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Personal tools

Sections

UMR 5672

logo de l'ENS de Lyon
logo du CNRS
You are here: Home / Seminars / Colloquium / Experimental many-body physics using arrays of individual Rydberg atoms

Experimental many-body physics using arrays of individual Rydberg atoms

Antoine Browaeys (Institut d'Optique, Palaiseau)
When Feb 13, 2017
from 11:00 to 12:00
Where Amphi. Schrödinger
Attendees Antoine Browaeys
Add event to calendar vCal
iCal

This talk will present our on-going effort to control the dipole-dipole interaction between cold Rydberg atoms in order to implement spin Hamiltonians that may be useful for quantum simulation of condensed matter problems. In our experiment, we trap individual atoms in two-dimensional arrays of optical tweezers [Nogrette, Phys. Rev. X 4, 021034 (2014)] separated by few micrometers and excite them to Rydberg states using lasers. The arrays are produced by a spatial light modulator, which shapes the dipole trap beam. We can create almost arbitrary, two-dimensional geometries of the arrays with near unit filling [Barredo, Science 354, 1021 (2016)].   The talk will present our demonstration of the coherent energy exchange in small chains of Rydberg atoms resulting from their dipole-dipole interaction [Barredo, Phys. Rev. Lett. 114, 113002 (2015)]. This exchange interaction realizes the XY spin model. We have also implemented the quantum Ising model [Labuhn, Nature 534, 667 (2016)]. The spin ½ Hamiltonian is mapped onto a system of Rydberg atoms excited by lasers and interacting by the van der Waals Rydberg interaction. We study various configurations such as one-dimensional chains of atoms with periodic boundary conditions, rings, or two-dimensional arrays containing up to 30 atoms. We measure the dynamics of the excitation for various strengths of the interactions between atoms. We compare the data with numerical simulations of this many-body system and found excellent agreement for some of the configurations.   This good control of an ensemble of interacting Rydberg atoms thus demonstrates a new promising platform for quantum simulation using neutral atoms, which is complementary to the other platforms based on ions, magnetic atoms or dipolar molecules.

(Antoine Browaeys, Sylvain de Léséleuc, D. Barredo, V. Lienhard, T. Lahaye)

 

More information about this event…