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Dive into the research topics where Alexander Lukin is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexander Lukin.


Nature | 2015

Measuring entanglement entropy in a quantum many-body system.

Rajibul Islam; Ruichao Ma; Philipp Preiss; M. Eric Tai; Alexander Lukin; Matthew Rispoli; Markus Greiner

Entanglement is one of the most intriguing features of quantum mechanics. It describes non-local correlations between quantum objects, and is at the heart of quantum information sciences. Entanglement is now being studied in diverse fields ranging from condensed matter to quantum gravity. However, measuring entanglement remains a challenge. This is especially so in systems of interacting delocalized particles, for which a direct experimental measurement of spatial entanglement has been elusive. Here, we measure entanglement in such a system of itinerant particles using quantum interference of many-body twins. Making use of our single-site-resolved control of ultracold bosonic atoms in optical lattices, we prepare two identical copies of a many-body state and interfere them. This enables us to directly measure quantum purity, Rényi entanglement entropy, and mutual information. These experiments pave the way for using entanglement to characterize quantum phases and dynamics of strongly correlated many-body systems.


Science | 2016

Quantum thermalization through entanglement in an isolated many-body system.

Adam Kaufman; M. Eric Tai; Alexander Lukin; Matthew Rispoli; Robert Schittko; Philipp Preiss; Markus Greiner

To thermalize, or not to thermalize? Intuition tells us that an isolated physical system subjected to a sudden change (i.e., quenching) will evolve in a way that maximizes its entropy. If the system is in a pure, zero-entropy quantum state, it is expected to remain so even after quenching. How do we then reconcile statistical mechanics with quantum laws? To address this question, Kaufman et al. used their quantum microscope to study strings of six rubidium atoms confined in the wells of an optical lattice (see the Perspective by Polkovnikov and Sels). When tunneling along the strings was suddenly switched on, the strings as a whole remained in a pure state, but smaller subsets of two or three atoms conformed to a thermal distribution. The force driving the thermalization was quantum entanglement. Science, this issue p. 794; see also p. 752 Single-site microscopy of strings of rubidium atoms in an optical lattice shows thermalization on a local scale. Statistical mechanics relies on the maximization of entropy in a system at thermal equilibrium. However, an isolated quantum many-body system initialized in a pure state remains pure during Schrödinger evolution, and in this sense it has static, zero entropy. We experimentally studied the emergence of statistical mechanics in a quantum state and observed the fundamental role of quantum entanglement in facilitating this emergence. Microscopy of an evolving quantum system indicates that the full quantum state remains pure, whereas thermalization occurs on a local scale. We directly measured entanglement entropy, which assumes the role of the thermal entropy in thermalization. The entanglement creates local entropy that validates the use of statistical physics for local observables. Our measurements are consistent with the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis.


Nature | 2017

Microscopy of the interacting Harper–Hofstadter model in the two-body limit

M. Eric Tai; Alexander Lukin; Matthew Rispoli; Robert Schittko; Tim Menke; Dan Borgnia; Philipp Preiss; Fabian Grusdt; Adam Kaufman; Markus Greiner

The interplay between magnetic fields and interacting particles can lead to exotic phases of matter that exhibit topological order and high degrees of spatial entanglement. Although these phases were discovered in a solid-state setting, recent innovations in systems of ultracold neutral atoms—uncharged atoms that do not naturally experience a Lorentz force—allow the synthesis of artificial magnetic, or gauge, fields. This experimental platform holds promise for exploring exotic physics in fractional quantum Hall systems, owing to the microscopic control and precision that is achievable in cold-atom systems. However, so far these experiments have mostly explored the regime of weak interactions, which precludes access to correlated many-body states. Here, through microscopic atomic control and detection, we demonstrate the controlled incorporation of strong interactions into a two-body system with a chiral band structure. We observe and explain the way in which interparticle interactions induce chirality in the propagation dynamics of particles in a ladder-like, real-space lattice governed by the interacting Harper–Hofstadter model, which describes lattice-confined, coherently mobile particles in the presence of a magnetic field. We use a bottom-up strategy to prepare interacting chiral quantum states, thus circumventing the challenges of a top-down approach that begins with a many-body system, the size of which can hinder the preparation of controlled states. Our experimental platform combines all of the necessary components for investigating highly entangled topological states, and our observations provide a benchmark for future experiments in the fractional quantum Hall regime.


Optics Express | 2016

Ultra-precise holographic beam shaping for microscopic quantum control

Philip Zupancic; Philipp Preiss; Ruichao Ma; Alexander Lukin; M. Eric Tai; Matthew Rispoli; Rajibul Islam; Markus Greiner

High-resolution addressing of individual ultracold atoms, trapped ions or solid state emitters allows for exquisite control in quantum optics experiments. This becomes possible through large aperture magnifying optics that project microscopic light patterns with diffraction limited performance. We use programmable amplitude holograms generated on a digital micromirror device to create arbitrary microscopic beam shapes with full phase and amplitude control. The system self-corrects for aberrations of up to several λ and reduces them to λ/50, leading to light patterns with a precision on the 10-4 level. We demonstrate aberration-compensated beam shaping in an optical lattice experiment and perform single-site addressing in a quantum gas microscope for 87Rb.


Science | 2015

Strongly correlated quantum walks in optical lattices.

Philipp Preiss; Ruichao Ma; M. Eric Tai; Alexander Lukin; Matthew Rispoli; Philip Zupancic; Yoav Lahini; Rajibul Islam; Markus Greiner


arXiv: Quantum Gases | 2015

Measuring entanglement entropy through the interference of quantum many-body twins

Rajibul Islam; Ruichao Ma; Philipp Preiss; M. Eric Tai; Alexander Lukin; Matthew Rispoli; Markus Greiner


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

Probing the thermal to many-body localized transition in one dimension with single site resolution

Alexander Lukin; Matthew Rispoli; Robert Schittko; Sooshin Kim; M. Eric Tai; Vedika Khemani; Adam Kaufman; Julian Leonard; Markus Greiner


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

Quench dynamics of a one-dimensional quantum many-body system

Sooshin Kim; Alexander Lukin; Matthew Rispoli; Robert Schittko; Simon A. Weidinger; Michael Knap; Adam Kaufman; Eric Tai; Julian Leonard; Markus Greiner


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

Site-resolved probing of the many-body localization transition in one dimension

Julian Leonard; Alexander Lukin; Matthew Rispoli; Robert Schittko; Sooshin Kim; Vedika Khemani; Adam Kaufman; M. Eric Tai; Markus Greiner


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Observation of quantum thermalization and progress towards the many-body localized regime

Adam Kaufman; Eric Tai; Alexander Lukin; Matthew Rispoli; Robert Schittko; Tim Menke; Philipp Preiss; Markus Greiner

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Rajibul Islam

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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