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Space-borne Bose-Einstein condensation for precision interferometry

Authors :
Becker, Dennis
Lachmann, Maike D.
Seidel, Stephan T.
Ahlers, Holger
Dinkelaker, Aline N.
Grosse, Jens
Hellmig, Ortwin
Müntinga, Hauke
Schkolnik, Vladimir
Wendrich, Thijs
Wenzlawski, André
Weps, Benjamin
Corgier, Robin
Lüdtke, Daniel
Franz, Tobias
Gaaloul, Naceur
Herr, Waldemar
Popp, Manuel
Amri, Sirine
Duncker, Hannes
Erbe, Maik
Kohfeldt, Anja
Kubelka-Lange, André
Braxmaier, Claus
Charron, Eric
Ertmer, Wolfgang
Krutzik, Markus
Lämmerzahl, Claus
Peters, Achim
Schleich, Wolfgang P.
Sengstock, Klaus
Walser, Reinhold
Wicht, Andreas
Windpassinger, Patrick
Rasel, Ernst M.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Space offers virtually unlimited free-fall in gravity. Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) enables ineffable low kinetic energies corresponding to pico- or even femtokelvins. The combination of both features makes atom interferometers with unprecedented sensitivity for inertial forces possible and opens a new era for quantum gas experiments. On January 23, 2017, we created Bose-Einstein condensates in space on the sounding rocket mission MAIUS-1 and conducted 110 experiments central to matter-wave interferometry. In particular, we have explored laser cooling and trapping in the presence of large accelerations as experienced during launch, and have studied the evolution, manipulation and interferometry employing Bragg scattering of BECs during the six-minute space flight. In this letter, we focus on the phase transition and the collective dynamics of BECs, whose impact is magnified by the extended free-fall time. Our experiments demonstrate a high reproducibility of the manipulation of BECs on the atom chip reflecting the exquisite control features and the robustness of our experiment. These properties are crucial to novel protocols for creating quantum matter with designed collective excitations at the lowest kinetic energy scales close to femtokelvins.<br />Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1806.06679
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0605-1