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Dive into the research topics where Carlo Sias is active.

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Featured researches published by Carlo Sias.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Direct Observation of Coherent Interorbital Spin-Exchange Dynamics

Giacomo Cappellini; Marco Mancini; G. Pagano; Pietro Lombardi; L. Livi; M. Siciliani de Cumis; P. Cancio; M. Pizzocaro; Davide Calonico; Filippo Levi; Carlo Sias; J. Catani; M. Inguscio; L. Fallani

We report on the first direct observation of fast spin-exchange coherent oscillations between different long-lived electronic orbitals of ultracold 173Yb fermions. We measure, in a model-independent way, the strength of the exchange interaction driving this coherent process. This observation allows us to retrieve important information on the interorbital collisional properties of 173Yb atoms and paves the way to novel quantum simulations of paradigmatic models of two-orbital quantum magnetism.


Nature | 2010

A trapped single ion inside a Bose-Einstein condensate

Christoph Zipkes; Stefan Palzer; Carlo Sias; Michael Köhl

Improved control of the motional and internal quantum states of ultracold neutral atoms and ions has opened intriguing possibilities for quantum simulation and quantum computation. Many-body effects have been explored with hundreds of thousands of quantum-degenerate neutral atoms, and coherent light–matter interfaces have been built. Systems of single or a few trapped ions have been used to demonstrate universal quantum computing algorithms and to search for variations of fundamental constants in precision atomic clocks. Until now, atomic quantum gases and single trapped ions have been treated separately in experiments. Here we investigate whether they can be advantageously combined into one hybrid system, by exploring the immersion of a single trapped ion into a Bose–Einstein condensate of neutral atoms. We demonstrate independent control over the two components of the hybrid system, study the fundamental interaction processes and observe sympathetic cooling of the single ion by the condensate. Our experiment calls for further research into the possibility of using this technique for the continuous cooling of quantum computers. We also anticipate that it will lead to explorations of entanglement in hybrid quantum systems and to fundamental studies of the decoherence of a single, locally controlled impurity particle coupled to a quantum environment.


Nature Physics | 2014

A one-dimensional liquid of Fermions with tunable spin

Guido Pagano; Marco Mancini; Giacomo Cappellini; Pietro Lombardi; Florian Schäfer; Hui Hu; Xia-Ji Liu; J. Catani; Carlo Sias; M. Inguscio; L. Fallani

The physics of one-dimensional many-body systems is rich but still insufficiently understood. An ultracold atom experiment investigates the behaviour of one-dimensional strongly correlated fermions with a tunable number of spin components.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Quantum transport through a Tonks-Girardeau gas.

Stefan Palzer; Christoph Zipkes; Carlo Sias; Michael Köhl

We investigate the propagation of spin impurity atoms through a strongly interacting one-dimensional Bose gas. The initially well localized impurities are accelerated by a constant force, very much analogous to electrons subject to a bias voltage, and propagate as a one-dimensional impurity spin wave packet. We follow the motion of the impurities in situ and characterize the interaction induced dynamics. We observe a very complex nonequilibrium dynamics, including the emergence of large density fluctuations in the remaining Bose gas, and multiple scattering events leading to dissipation of the impuritys motion.


Nature Physics | 2012

Controlling chemical reactions of a single particle

Lothar Ratschbacher; Christoph Zipkes; Carlo Sias; Michael Köhl

Chemical reactions between a single trapped ion and a condensate of ultracold neutral atoms are investigated by controlling the quantum states of both ion and atoms—revealing the effect of the hyperfine interaction on the reaction dynamics.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Cold heteronuclear atom-ion collisions.

Christoph Zipkes; Stefan Palzer; Lothar Ratschbacher; Carlo Sias; Michael Köhl

We study cold heteronuclear atom-ion collisions by immersing a trapped single ion into an ultracold atomic cloud. Using ultracold atoms as reaction targets, our measurement is sensitive to elastic collisions with extremely small energy transfer. The observed energy-dependent elastic atom-ion scattering rate deviates significantly from the prediction of Langevin but is in full agreement with the quantum mechanical cross section. Additionally, we characterize inelastic collisions leading to chemical reactions at the single particle level and measure the energy-dependent reaction rate constants. The reaction products are identified by in-trap mass spectrometry, revealing the branching ratio between radiative and nonradiative charge exchange processes.


New Journal of Physics | 2011

Kinetics of a single trapped ion in an ultracold buffer gas

Christoph Zipkes; Lothar Ratschbacher; Carlo Sias; Michael Köhl

The immersion of a single ion confined by a radiofrequency (RF) trap in an ultracold atomic gas extends the concept of buffer gas cooling to a new temperature regime. The steady-state energy distribution of the ion is determined by its kinetics in the RF field rather than the temperature of the buffer gas. Moreover, the finite size of the ultracold gas facilitates the observation of back-action of the ion onto the buffer gas. We numerically investigate the systems properties depending on atom–ion mass ratio, trap geometry, differential cross-section and non-uniform neutral atom density distribution. Experimental results are well reproduced by our model considering only elastic collisions. We identify excess micromotion to set the typical scale for the ion energy statistics and explore the applicability of the mobility collision cross-section to the ultracold regime.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Decoherence of a single-ion qubit immersed in a spin-polarized atomic bath.

Lothar Ratschbacher; Carlo Sias; L. Carcagni; J. M. Silver; Christoph Zipkes; Michael Köhl

We report on the immersion of a spin qubit encoded in a single trapped ion into a spin-polarized neutral atom environment, which possesses both continuous (motional) and discrete (spin) degrees of freedom. The environment offers the possibility of a precise microscopic description, which allows us to understand dynamics and decoherence from first principles. We observe the spin dynamics of the qubit and measure the decoherence times (T(1) and T(2)), which are determined by the spin-exchange interaction as well as by an unexpectedly strong spin-nonconserving coupling mechanism.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Strongly Interacting Gas of Two-Electron Fermions at an Orbital Feshbach Resonance.

Guido Pagano; Marco Mancini; Giacomo Cappellini; L. Livi; Carlo Sias; J. Catani; M. Inguscio; L. Fallani

We report on the experimental observation of a strongly interacting gas of ultracold two-electron fermions with an orbital degree of freedom and magnetically tunable interactions. This realization has been enabled by the demonstration of a novel kind of Feshbach resonance occurring in the scattering of two (173)Yb atoms in different nuclear and electronic states. The strongly interacting regime at resonance is evidenced by the observation of anisotropic hydrodynamic expansion of the two-orbital Fermi gas. These results pave the way towards the realization of new quantum states of matter with strongly correlated fermions with an orbital degree of freedom.


arXiv: Atomic Physics | 2011

Hybrid quantum systems of atoms and ions

Christoph Zipkes; Lothar Ratschbacher; Stefan Palzer; Carlo Sias; Michael Köhl

In recent years, ultracold atoms have emerged as an exceptionally controllable experimental system to investigate fundamental physics, ranging from quantum information science to simulations of condensed matter models. Here we go one step further and explore how cold atoms can be combined with other quantum systems to create new quantum hybrids with tailored properties. Coupling atomic quantum many-body states to an independently controllable single-particle gives access to a wealth of novel physics and to completely new detection and manipulation techniques. We report on recent experiments in which we have for the first time deterministically placed a single ion into an atomic Bose Einstein condensate. A trapped ion, which currently constitutes the most pristine single particle quantum system, can be observed and manipulated at the single particle level. In this single-particle/many-body composite quantum system we show sympathetic cooling of the ion and observe chemical reactions of single particles in situ.

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J. Catani

European Laboratory for Non-Linear Spectroscopy

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L. Fallani

University of Florence

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M. Inguscio

University of Florence

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L. Livi

University of Florence

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