Quantum gas microscope offers glimpse of quirky ultracold atoms

November 4, 2009 Quantum gas microscope offers glimpse of quirky ultracold atoms

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A sketch of a quantum gas microscope that images individual ultracold atoms in an optical lattice. It’s part of scientists’ efforts to use ultracold quantum gases to understand and develop novel quantum materials. Markus Greiner/Harvard University

(PhysOrg.com) -- Physicists at Harvard University have created a quantum gas microscope that can be used to observe single atoms at temperatures so low the particles follow the rules of quantum mechanics, behaving in bizarre ways.

The work, published this week in the journal Nature, represents the first time scientists have detected single atoms in a made solely of light, called a Bose Hubbard . It's part of scientists' efforts to use ultracold quantum gases to understand and develop novel quantum materials.

"Ultracold atoms in optical lattices can be used as a model to help understand the physics behind superconductivity or quantum magnetism, for example," says senior author Markus Greiner, an assistant professor of physics at Harvard and an affiliate of the Harvard-MIT Center for . "We expect that our technique, which bridges the gap between earlier microscopic and macroscopic approaches to the study of quantum systems, will help in quantum simulations of condensed matter systems, and also find applications in quantum information processing."

The microscope developed by Greiner and his colleagues is a high-resolution device capable of viewing single atoms -- in this case, atoms of rubidium -- occupying individual, closely spaced lattice sites. The rubidium atoms are cooled to just 5 billionths of a degree above (-273 degrees Celsius).

"At such low temperatures, atoms follow the rules of , causing them to behave in very unexpected ways," explains first author Waseem S. Bakr, a graduate student in Harvard's Department of Physics. "Quantum mechanics allows atoms to quickly tunnel around within the lattice, move around with no resistance, and even be 'delocalized' over the entire lattice. With our microscope we can individually observe tens of thousands of atoms working together to perform these amazing feats."

In their paper, Bakr, Greiner, and colleagues present images of single rubidium atoms confined to an optical lattice created through projections of a laser-generated holographic pattern. The neighboring atoms are just 640 nanometers apart, allowing them to quickly tunnel their way through the lattice.

Confining a quantum gas -- such as a Bose-Einstein condensate -- in such an optically generated lattice creates a system that can be used to model complex phenomena in condensed-matter physics, such as superfluidity. Until now, only the bulk properties of such systems could be studied, but the new microscope's ability to detect arrays of thousands of single gives scientists what amounts to a new workshop for tinkering with the fundamental properties of matter, making it possible to study these simulated systems in much more detail, and possibly also forming the basis of a single-site readout system for quantum computation.

"There are many unsolved questions regarding quantum materials, such as high-temperature superconductors that lose all electrical resistance if they are cooled to moderate temperatures," Greiner says. "We hope this ultracold atom model system can provide answers to some of these important questions, paving the way for creating novel quantum materials with as-yet unknown properties."

Source: Harvard University (news : web)


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  • Question - Nov 04, 2009
    • Rank: not rated yet
    Quote from article:
    "With our microscope we can individually observe tens of thousands of atoms working together to perform these amazing feats."

    Why no pictures for us?
  • Alexa - Nov 05, 2009
    • Rank: not rated yet
    Because editors are lazy to search the web:

    http://cuaweb.mit...Id=10243
  • Alexa - Nov 05, 2009
    • Rank: not rated yet
    On the other hand, I can imagine, it's quite risky business to repost images from non-authorized sites both from copyright, both from pure factual reasons. For example, you can be never sure, picture borrowed in nonofficial way illustrates article subject at all, until you're not really an expert in given area.
  • Tachyon8491 - Nov 05, 2009
    • Rank: not rated yet
    A brilliant invention as culmination of consistent scientific pursuit of the desired outcomes. Well done to this research team. Without doubt such instrumentation heralds a new phase in empirical observation in the micro-domain and will result in new modelling of processes and their dynamics there.

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