Matter-wave interferometry in a double well on an atom chip

Author:  ["T. Schumm","S. Hofferberth","L. M. Andersson","S. Wildermuth","S. Groth","I. Bar-Joseph","J. Schmiedmayer","P. Krüger"]

Publication:  Nature Physics

CITE.CC academic search helps you expand the influence of your papers.

Tags:     Physics

Abstract

Matter-wave interference experiments enable us to study matter at its most basic, quantum level and form the basis of high-precision sensors for applications such as inertial and gravitational field sensing. Success in both of these pursuits requires the development of atom-optical elements that can manipulate matter waves at the same time as preserving their coherence and phase. Here, we present an integrated interferometer based on a simple, coherent matter-wave beam splitter constructed on an atom chip. Through the use of radio-frequency-induced adiabatic double-well potentials, we demonstrate the splitting of Bose–Einstein condensates into two clouds separated by distances ranging from 3 to 80 μm, enabling access to both tunnelling and isolated regimes. Moreover, by analysing the interference patterns formed by combining two clouds of ultracold atoms originating from a single condensate, we measure the deterministic phase evolution throughout the splitting process. We show that we can control the relative phase between the two fully separated samples and that our beam splitter is phase-preserving.

Cite this article

Schumm, T., Hofferberth, S., Andersson, L. et al. Matter-wave interferometry in a double well on an atom chip. Nature Phys 1, 57–62 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys125

View full text

>> Full Text:   Matter-wave interferometry in a double well on an atom chip

The role of the interlayer state in the electronic structure of superconducting graphite intercalate

返回列表