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Dive into the research topics where David W. Schönleber is active.

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Featured researches published by David W. Schönleber.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Full counting statistics of laser excited Rydberg aggregates in a one-dimensional geometry

H. Schempp; G. Günter; Martin Robert-de-Saint-Vincent; C. S. Hofmann; D. Breyel; A. Komnik; David W. Schönleber; Martin Gärttner; Jörg Evers; S. Whitlock; M. Weidemüller

We experimentally study the full counting statistics of few-body Rydberg aggregates excited from a quasi-one-dimensional atomic gas. We measure asymmetric excitation spectra and increased second and third order statistical moments of the Rydberg number distribution, from which we determine the average aggregate size. Estimating rates for different excitation processes we conclude that the aggregates grow sequentially around an initial grain. Direct comparison with numerical simulations confirms this conclusion and reveals the presence of liquidlike spatial correlations. Our findings demonstrate the importance of dephasing in strongly correlated Rydberg gases and introduce a way to study spatial correlations in interacting many-body quantum systems without imaging.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Quantum Simulation of Energy Transport with Embedded Rydberg Aggregates

David W. Schönleber; Alexander Eisfeld; Michael Genkin; S. Whitlock; Sebastian Wüster

We show that an array of ultracold Rydberg atoms embedded in a laser driven background gas can serve as an aggregate for simulating exciton dynamics and energy transport with a controlled environment. Energetic disorder and decoherence introduced by the interaction with the background gas atoms can be controlled by the laser parameters. This allows for an almost ideal realization of a Haken-Reineker-Strobl-type model for energy transport. The transport can be monitored using the same mechanism that provides control over the environment. The degree of decoherence is traced back to information gained on the excitation location through the monitoring, turning the setup into an experimentally accessible model system for studying the effects of quantum measurements on the dynamics of a many-body quantum system.


New Journal of Physics | 2016

Optomechanical interactions in non-Hermitian photonic molecules

David W. Schönleber; Alexander Eisfeld; Ramy El-Ganainy

We investigate optomechanical interactions in non-Hermitian photonic molecules. We show that the maximum enhancement of optomechanical coupling for steady state solutions is achieved for unbalanced gain and loss profiles away from exceptional points.


Physical Review A | 2014

Coherent versus incoherent excitation dynamics in dissipative many-body Rydberg systems

David W. Schönleber; Martin Gärttner; Jörg Evers

We study the impact of dephasing on the excitation dynamics of a cloud of ultracold two-level Rydberg atoms for both resonant and off-resonant laser excitation, using the wave function Monte Carlo (MCWF) technique. We find that while for resonant laser driving, dephasing mainly leads to an increase of the Rydberg population and a decrease of the Mandel Q parameter, at off-resonant driving strong dephasing toggles between direct excitation of pairs of atoms and subsequent excitation of single atoms, respectively. These two excitation mechanisms can be directly quantified via the pair correlation function, which shows strong suppression of the two-photon resonance peak for strong dephasing. Consequently, qualitatively different dynamics arise in the excitation statistics for weak and strong dephasing in off-resonant excitation. Our findings show that time-resolved excitation number measurements can serve as a powerful tool to identify the dominating process in the systems excitation dynamics.


Physical Review A | 2014

Semianalytical model for nonlinear absorption in strongly interacting Rydberg gases

Martin Gärttner; S. Whitlock; David W. Schönleber; Jörg Evers

Rate equation models are extensively used to describe the many-body states of laser driven atomic gases. We show that the properties of the rate equation model used to describe nonlinear optical effects arising in interacting Rydberg gases can be understood by considering the excitation of individual superatoms. From this we deduce a simple semianalytical model that accurately describes the Rydberg density and optical susceptibility for different dimensionalities. We identify the previously reported universal dependence of the susceptibility on the Rydberg excited fraction as an intrinsic property of the rate equation model that is rooted in one-body properties. Benchmarking against exact master equation calculations, we identify regimes in which the semianalytical model is particularly reliable. The performance of the model improves in the presence of dephasing which destroys higher-order atomic coherences.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017

Singlet Fission in Weakly Interacting Acene Molecules

Sharareh Izadnia; David W. Schönleber; Alexander Eisfeld; Alexander Ruf; A. C. LaForge; F. Stienkemeier

The energy conversion in solar cells has conventionally been limited by the Shockley-Queisser limit. Singlet fission (SF), a decay mechanism where a single excited singlet state is converted into two triplet states, can drastically improve this efficiency. For the most part, observation of SF has been limited to crystalline structures in solids and films, where strong ordering was present. Here we report on singlet fission in a disordered system where organic chromophores are distributed on the surface of a rare gas cluster. In this case, the intermolecular distances and degree of excitation can be varied to obtain their effects on the rate of singlet fission. We introduce a kinematic model that takes into account the details of the geometrical arrangement of the system as well as the time-dependent populations of the relevant states of each molecule and evaluate the trends obtained by SF on the experimental observables.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Collective Excitation of Rydberg-Atom Ensembles beyond the Superatom Model

Martin Gärttner; S. Whitlock; David W. Schönleber; Jörg Evers

In an ensemble of laser-driven atoms involving strongly interacting Rydberg states, the steady-state excitation probability is usually substantially suppressed. In contrast, here we identify a regime in which the Rydberg excited fraction is enhanced by the interaction. This effect is associated with the buildup of many-body coherences induced by coherent multiphoton excitations between collective states. The excitation enhancement should be observable under currently existing experimental conditions and may serve as a direct probe for the presence of coherent multiphoton dynamics involving collective quantum states.


Journal of Physics B | 2016

Non-Markovian dynamics in ultracold Rydberg aggregates

Michael Genkin; David W. Schönleber; Sebastian Wüster; Alexander Eisfeld

We propose a setup of an open quantum system in which the environment can be tuned such that either Markovian or non-Markovian system dynamics can be achieved. The implementation uses ultracold Rydberg atoms, relying on their strong long-range interactions. Our suggestion extends the features available for quantum simulators of molecular systems employing Rydberg aggregates and presents a new test bench for fundamental studies of the classification of system-environment interactions and the resulting system dynamics in open quantum systems.


arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2016

Engineering thermal reservoirs with ultracold Rydberg atoms

David W. Schönleber; Christopher D. B. Bentley; Alexander Eisfeld


New Journal of Physics | 2018

Engineering thermal reservoirs for ultracold dipole-dipole-interacting Rydberg atoms

David W. Schönleber; Christopher D. B. Bentley; Alexander Eisfeld

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