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Dive into the research topics where Anton Mazurenko is active.

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Featured researches published by Anton Mazurenko.


Nature | 2017

A cold-atom Fermi–Hubbard antiferromagnet

Anton Mazurenko; Christie S. Chiu; Geoffrey Ji; Maxwell Parsons; Márton Kanász-Nagy; R. Schmidt; Fabian Grusdt; Eugene Demler; Daniel Greif; Markus Greiner

Exotic phenomena in systems with strongly correlated electrons emerge from the interplay between spin and motional degrees of freedom. For example, doping an antiferromagnet is expected to give rise to pseudogap states and high-temperature superconductors. Quantum simulation using ultracold fermions in optical lattices could help to answer open questions about the doped Hubbard Hamiltonian, and has recently been advanced by quantum gas microscopy. Here we report the realization of an antiferromagnet in a repulsively interacting Fermi gas on a two-dimensional square lattice of about 80 sites at a temperature of 0.25 times the tunnelling energy. The antiferromagnetic long-range order manifests through the divergence of the correlation length, which reaches the size of the system, the development of a peak in the spin structure factor and a staggered magnetization that is close to the ground-state value. We hole-dope the system away from half-filling, towards a regime in which complex many-body states are expected, and find that strong magnetic correlations persist at the antiferromagnetic ordering vector up to dopings of about 15 per cent. In this regime, numerical simulations are challenging and so experiments provide a valuable benchmark. Our results demonstrate that microscopy of cold atoms in optical lattices can help us to understand the low-temperature Fermi–Hubbard model.Many exotic phenomena in strongly correlated electron systems emerge from the interplay between spin and motional degrees of freedom [1, 2]. For example, doping an antiferromagnet gives rise to interesting phases including pseudogap states and high-temperature superconductors [3]. A promising route towards achieving a complete understanding of these materials begins with analytic and computational analysis of simplified models. Quantum simulation has recently emerged as a complementary approach towards understanding these models [4–8]. Ultracold fermions in optical lattices offer the potential to answer open questions on the lowtemperature regime of the doped Hubbard model [9–11], which is thought to capture essential aspects of the cuprate superconductor phase diagram but is numerically intractable in that parameter regime. Already, Mott-insulating phases and short-range antiferromagnetic correlations have been observed, but temperatures were too high to create an antiferromagnet [12–15]. A new perspective is afforded by quantum gas microscopy [16–28], which allows readout of magnetic correlations at the site-resolved level [25–28]. Here we report the realization of an antiferromagnet in a repulsively interacting Fermi gas on a 2D square lattice of approximately 80 sites. Using site-resolved imaging, we detect (finite-size) antiferromagnetic long-range order (LRO) through the development of a peak in the spin structure factor and the divergence of the correlation length that reaches the size of the system. At our lowest temperature of T/t = 0.25(2) we find strong order across the entire sample, where the staggered magnetization approaches the ground-state value. Our experimental platform enables doping away from half filling, where pseudogap states and stripe ordering are expected, but theoretical methods become numerically intractable. In this regime we find that the antiferromagnetic LRO persists to hole dopings of about 15%, providing a guideline for computational methods. Our results demonstrate that quantum gas microscopy of ultracold fermions in optical lattices can now address open questions on the low-temperature Hubbard model. The Hubbard Hamiltonian is a fundamental model for spinful lattice electrons describing a competition between kinetic energy t and interaction energy U [29]. In the limiting case of half-filling (average one particle per site) and dominant interactions (U/t 1) the Hubbard model maps to the Heisenberg model [1]. There, the exchange energy J = 4t/U can give rise to antiferromagnetically ordered states at low temperatures [30]. This order persists for all finite U/t, where charge fluctuations reduce the ordering strength [31]. Away from half-filling, the coupling between motional and spin degrees of freedom is expected to give rise to a rich many-body phase diagram (see Fig. 1a), which is challenging to understand theoretically due to the fermion sign problem [32]. Even so, in the thermodynamic limit commensurate long-range order (LRO) has been conjectured to transition to incommensurate LRO infinitesimally far from half-filling, whereas for finite-size systems commensurate order is expected to extend to non-zero doping [31, 33]. The strength of global antiferromagnetic order in spin systems on bipartite lattices is quantified by the staggered magnetization m = |m|. The component along the z spin direction is


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Site-resolved imaging of fermionic ^{6}Li in an optical lattice.

Maxwell Parsons; Florian Huber; Anton Mazurenko; Christie S. Chiu; Widagdo Setiawan; Katherine Wooley-Brown; Sebastian Blatt; Markus Greiner

We demonstrate site-resolved imaging of individual fermionic ^{6}Li atoms in a single layer of a 3D optical lattice. To preserve the density distribution during fluorescence imaging, we simultaneously cool the atoms with 3D Raman sideband cooling. This laser cooling technique, demonstrated here for the first time for ^{6}Li atoms, also provides a pathway to rapid low-entropy filling of an optical lattice. We are able to determine the occupation of individual lattice sites with a fidelity >95%, enabling direct, local measurement of particle correlations in Fermi lattice systems. This ability will be instrumental for creating and investigating low-temperature phases of the Fermi-Hubbard model, including antiferromagnets and d-wave superfluidity.


Science | 2016

Site-resolved measurement of the spin-correlation function in the Fermi-Hubbard model

Maxwell Parsons; Anton Mazurenko; Christie S. Chiu; Geoffrey Ji; Daniel Greif; Markus Greiner

Quantum many-body systems exhibiting magnetic correlations underlie a wide variety of phenomena. High-temperature superconductivity, for example, can arise from the correlated motion of holes on an antiferromagnetic (AFM) Mott insulator. Ultracold fermionic atoms in optical lattices provide realizations of strongly correlated many-body systems with a tunability that is unparalleled in conventional solid-state systems. Recent experiments exploring the Hubbard model with cold atoms are accessing temperatures where AFM correlations form, but have only observed these correlations via measurements that were averages over inhomogeneous systems. With the advance of quantum gas microscopy we can now take a snapshot of the real-space correlations in a single quantum many-body state at the atomic scale. Here we report site-resolved observations of AFM correlations in a Hubbard-regime optical lattice. The ability to locally measure spin correlations for a many-body state allows us to make unprecedented comparisons to theoretical predictions. We measure the in-situ distributions of the particle density and magnetic correlations, extract thermodynamic quantities from comparisons to theory, directly measure the correlation length, and study how lattice loading dynamics affect our ability to prepare samples in thermal equilibrium. The largest nearest-neighbor spin correlator that we observe is 53 % of the value predicted by quantum Monte Carlo calculations in the zero-temperature limit. Our results demonstrate that quantum gas microscopy is a powerful tool for studying fermionic quantum magnetism. Direct access to many-body physics at the single-particle level and the microscopic study of quantum dynamics will further our understanding of how new states of matter emerge from the interplay of motion and magnetism in quantum many-body systems.Exotic phases of matter can emerge from strong correlations in quantum many-body systems. Quantum gas microscopy affords the opportunity to study these correlations with unprecedented detail. Here, we report site-resolved observations of antiferromagnetic correlations in a two-dimensional, Hubbard-regime optical lattice and demonstrate the ability to measure the spin-correlation function over any distance. We measure the in situ distributions of the particle density and magnetic correlations, extract thermodynamic quantities from comparisons to theory, and observe statistically significant correlations over three lattice sites. The temperatures that we reach approach the limits of available numerical simulations. The direct access to many-body physics at the single-particle level demonstrated by our results will further our understanding of how the interplay of motion and magnetism gives rise to new states of matter.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2017

Note: Suppression of kHz-frequency switching noise in digital micro-mirror devices

Klaus Hueck; Anton Mazurenko; Niclas Luick; Thomas Lompe; Henning Moritz

High resolution digital micro-mirror devices (DMDs) make it possible to produce nearly arbitrary light fields with high accuracy, reproducibility, and low optical aberrations. However, using these devices to trap and manipulate ultracold atomic systems for, e.g., quantum simulation is often complicated by the presence of kHz-frequency switching noise. Here we demonstrate a simple hardware extension that solves this problem and makes it possible to produce truly static light fields. This modification leads to a 47 fold increase in the time that we can hold ultracold 6Li atoms in a dipole potential created with the DMD. Finally, we provide reliable and user friendly APIs written in Matlab and Python to control the DMD.


Applied Mathematics and Computation | 2013

Reactive rimming flow of non-Newtonian fluids

Sergei Fomin; Anton Mazurenko; Ravi Shankar; Vladimir Chugunov

The steady and non-steady flows of a liquid polymer treated as a non-Newtonian fluid on the inner surface of a horizontal rotating cylinder are investigated. Since the Reynolds number is small and the liquid film is thin, a simple lubrication approximation is applied. Governing equations for non-steady Power-Law and Ellis fluids are solved numerically and the time of transition from non-steady to steady-state mode for various model parameters and flow conditions are defined. The stabilization effect of a chemical reaction within the polymeric fluid (reactive flow) is examined.


Physical Review Letters | 2018

Quantum State Engineering of a Hubbard System with Ultracold Fermions

Christie S. Chiu; Geoffrey Ji; Anton Mazurenko; Daniel Greif; Markus Greiner


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

New Frontiers in Fermionic Quantum Gas Microscopy

Muqing Xu; Christie S. Chiu; Geoffery Ji; Anton Mazurenko; Maxwell Parsons; Márton Kanász-Nagy; Richard R. Schmidt; Fabian Grusdt; Annabelle Bohrdt; Eugene Demler; Daniel Greif; Markus Greiner


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

New cooling schemes for creating ultra-low entropy states of fermions in optical lattices

Christie S. Chiu; Geoffrey Ji; Anton Mazurenko; Muqing Xu; Daniel Greif; Markus Greiner


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Realization of a long-range antiferromagnet in the Hubbard model with ultracold atoms

Anton Mazurenko; Christie S. Chiu; Geoffrey Ji; Maxwell Parsons; Márton Kanász-Nagy; R. Schmidt; Fabian Grusdt; Eugene Demler; Daniel Greif; Markus Greiner


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Exploring long-range antiferromagnets with single-site resolution

Christie S. Chiu; Anton Mazurenko; Geoffrey Ji; Maxwell Parsons; Márton Kanász-Nagy; R. Schmidt; Fabian Grusdt; Eugene Demler; Daniel Greif; Markus Greiner

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Sebastian Blatt

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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