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Dive into the research topics where Johannes Hecker Denschlag is active.

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Featured researches published by Johannes Hecker Denschlag.


Advances in Atomic Molecular and Optical Physics | 2002

Microscopic Atom Optics: From Wires to an Atom Chip

Ron Folman; Peter Krüger; Jörg Schmiedmayer; Johannes Hecker Denschlag; Carsten Henkel

We give a comprehensive overview of the development of micro traps, from the first experiments on guiding atoms using current carrying wires in the early 1990s to the creation of a BEC on an atom chip.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Dynamics of a cold trapped ion in a Bose-Einstein condensate.

Stefan Schmid; Arne Härter; Johannes Hecker Denschlag

We investigate the interaction of a laser-cooled trapped ion (Ba+ or Rb+) with an optically confined ⁸⁷Rb Bose-Einstein condensate. The system features interesting dynamics of the ion and the atom cloud as determined by their collisions and their motion in their respective traps. Elastic as well as inelastic processes are observed and their respective cross sections are determined. We demonstrate that a single ion can be used to probe the density profile of an ultracold atom cloud.


Physical Review Letters | 1999

GUIDING NEUTRAL ATOMS WITH A WIRE

Johannes Hecker Denschlag; Donatella Cassettari; Joerg Schmiedmayer

We demonstrate guiding of cold neutral atoms along a current carrying wire. Atoms either move in Kepler-like orbits around the wire or are guided in a potential tube on the side of the wire which is created by applying an additional homogeneous bias field. These atom guides are very versatile and promising for applications in atom optics.


New Journal of Physics | 2006

Long distance transport of ultracold atoms using a 1D optical lattice

Stefan Schmid; G. Thalhammer; K. Winkler; Florian Lang; Johannes Hecker Denschlag

We study the horizontal transport of ultracold atoms over macroscopic distances of up to 20 cm with a moving 1D optical lattice. By using an optical Bessel beam to form the optical lattice, we can achieve nearly homogeneous trapping conditions over the full transport length, which is crucial in order to hold the atoms against gravity for such a wide range. Fast transport velocities of up to 6 m s−1 (corresponding to about 1100 photon recoils) and accelerations of up to 2600 m s−2 are reached. Even at high velocities the momentum of the atoms is precisely defined with an uncertainty of less than one photon recoil. This allows for construction of an atom catapult with high kinetic energy resolution, which might have applications in novel collision experiments.


Physical Review A | 2005

Inducing an optical Feshbach resonance via stimulated Raman coupling

G. Thalhammer; Matthias Theis; K. Winkler; R. Grimm; Johannes Hecker Denschlag

We demonstrate a method of inducing an optical Feshbach resonance based on a coherent free-bound stimulated Raman transition. In our experiment atoms in a {sup 87}Rb Bose-Einstein condensate are exposed to two phase-locked Raman laser beams which couple pairs of colliding atoms to a molecular ground state. By controlling the power and relative detuning of the two laser beams, we can change the atomic scattering length considerably. The dependence of scattering length on these parameters is studied experimentally and modeled theoretically.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Single ion as a three-body reaction center in an ultracold atomic gas.

Arne Härter; Artjom Krükow; Andreas Brunner; Wolfgang Schnitzler; Stefan Schmid; Johannes Hecker Denschlag

We report on three-body recombination of a single trapped Rb(+) ion and two neutral Rb atoms in an ultracold atom cloud. We observe that the corresponding rate coefficient K(3) depends on collision energy and is about a factor of 1000 larger than for three colliding neutral Rb atoms. In the three-body recombination process large energies up to several 0.1 eV are released leading to an ejection of the ion from the atom cloud. It is sympathetically recooled back into the cloud via elastic binary collisions with cold atoms. Further, we find that the final ionic product of the three-body processes is again an atomic Rb(+) ion suggesting that the ion merely acts as a catalyzer, possibly in the formation of deeply bound Rb(2) molecules.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

An apparatus for immersing trapped ions into an ultracold gas of neutral atoms

Stefan Schmid; Arne Härter; Albert Frisch; Sascha Hoinka; Johannes Hecker Denschlag

We describe a hybrid vacuum system in which a single ion or a well-defined small number of trapped ions (in our case Ba(+) or Rb(+)) can be immersed into a cloud of ultracold neutral atoms (in our case Rb). This apparatus allows for the study of collisions and interactions between atoms and ions in the ultracold regime. Our setup is a combination of a Bose-Einstein condensation apparatus and a linear Paul trap. The main design feature of the apparatus is to first separate the production locations for the ion and the ultracold atoms and then to bring the two species together. This scheme has advantages in terms of stability and available access to the region where the atom-ion collision experiments are carried out. The ion and the atoms are brought together using a moving one-dimensional optical lattice transport which vertically lifts the atomic sample over a distance of 30 cm from its production chamber into the center of the Paul trap in another chamber. We present techniques to detect and control the relative position between the ion and the atom cloud.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Energy Scaling of Cold Atom-Atom-Ion Three-Body Recombination

Artjom Krükow; Amir Mohammadi; Arne Härter; Johannes Hecker Denschlag; Jesús Pérez-Ríos; Chris H. Greene

We study three-body recombination of Ba^{+}+Rb+Rb in the mK regime where a single ^{138}Ba^{+} ion in a Paul trap is immersed into a cloud of ultracold ^{87}Rb atoms. We measure the energy dependence of the three-body rate coefficient k_{3} and compare the results to the theoretical prediction, k_{3}∝E_{col}^{-3/4}, where E_{col} is the collision energy. We find agreement if we assume that the nonthermal ion energy distribution is determined by at least two different micromotion induced energy scales. Furthermore, using classical trajectory calculations we predict how the median binding energy of the formed molecules scales with the collision energy. Our studies give new insights into the kinetics of an ion immersed in an ultracold atom cloud and yield important prospects for atom-ion experiments targeting the s-wave regime.


Physical Review A | 2016

Reactive two-body and three-body collisions of Ba + in an ultracold Rb gas

Artjom Krükow; Amir Mohammadi; Arne Härter; Johannes Hecker Denschlag

We analyze reactive collisions of a single


arXiv: Quantum Gases | 2015

Mixing of 0

Markus Deiß; E. Tiemann; Björn Drews; Johannes Hecker Denschlag

{\mathrm{Ba}}^{+}

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R. Grimm

University of Innsbruck

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K. Winkler

University of Innsbruck

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Jörg Schmiedmayer

Vienna University of Technology

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A. Altmeyer

University of Innsbruck

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Florian Lang

University of Tübingen

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C. Kohstall

University of Innsbruck

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