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Dive into the research topics where Karina Jimenez-Garcia is active.

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Featured researches published by Karina Jimenez-Garcia.


Nature | 2011

Spin–orbit-coupled Bose–Einstein condensates

Yu-Ju Lin; Karina Jimenez-Garcia; I. B. Spielman

Spin–orbit (SO) coupling—the interaction between a quantum particle’s spin and its momentum—is ubiquitous in physical systems. In condensed matter systems, SO coupling is crucial for the spin-Hall effect and topological insulators; it contributes to the electronic properties of materials such as GaAs, and is important for spintronic devices. Quantum many-body systems of ultracold atoms can be precisely controlled experimentally, and would therefore seem to provide an ideal platform on which to study SO coupling. Although an atom’s intrinsic SO coupling affects its electronic structure, it does not lead to coupling between the spin and the centre-of-mass motion of the atom. Here, we engineer SO coupling (with equal Rashba and Dresselhaus strengths) in a neutral atomic Bose–Einstein condensate by dressing two atomic spin states with a pair of lasers. Such coupling has not been realized previously for ultracold atomic gases, or indeed any bosonic system. Furthermore, in the presence of the laser coupling, the interactions between the two dressed atomic spin states are modified, driving a quantum phase transition from a spatially spin-mixed state (lasers off) to a phase-separated state (above a critical laser intensity). We develop a many-body theory that provides quantitative agreement with the observed location of the transition. The engineered SO coupling—equally applicable for bosons and fermions—sets the stage for the realization of topological insulators in fermionic neutral atom systems.


Nature | 2009

Synthetic magnetic fields for ultracold neutral atoms

Yu-Ju Lin; Robert L. Compton; Karina Jimenez-Garcia; J. V. Porto; I. B. Spielman

Neutral atomic Bose condensates and degenerate Fermi gases have been used to realize important many-body phenomena in their most simple and essential forms, without many of the complexities usually associated with material systems. However, the charge neutrality of these systems presents an apparent limitation—a wide range of intriguing phenomena arise from the Lorentz force for charged particles in a magnetic field, such as the fractional quantum Hall effect in two-dimensional electron systems. The limitation can be circumvented by exploiting the equivalence of the Lorentz force and the Coriolis force to create synthetic magnetic fields in rotating neutral systems. This was demonstrated by the appearance of quantized vortices in pioneering experiments on rotating quantum gases, a hallmark of superfluids or superconductors in a magnetic field. However, because of technical issues limiting the maximum rotation velocity, the metastable nature of the rotating state and the difficulty of applying stable rotating optical lattices, rotational approaches are not able to reach the large fields required for quantum Hall physics. Here we experimentally realize an optically synthesized magnetic field for ultracold neutral atoms, which is evident from the appearance of vortices in our Bose–Einstein condensate. Our approach uses a spatially dependent optical coupling between internal states of the atoms, yielding a Berry’s phase sufficient to create large synthetic magnetic fields, and is not subject to the limitations of rotating systems. With a suitable lattice configuration, it should be possible to reach the quantum Hall regime, potentially enabling studies of topological quantum computation.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

The Peierls substitution in an engineered lattice potential

Karina Jimenez-Garcia; Lindsay J. LeBlanc; Ross Williams; Matthew Beeler; Abigail R. Perry; I. B. Spielman

Artificial gauge fields open the possibility to realize quantum many-body systems with ultracold atoms, by engineering Hamiltonians usually associated with electronic systems. In the presence of a periodic potential, artificial gauge fields may bring ultracold atoms closer to the quantum Hall regime. Here, we describe a one-dimensional lattice derived purely from effective Zeeman shifts resulting from a combination of Raman coupling and radio-frequency magnetic fields. In this lattice, the tunneling matrix element is generally complex. We control both the amplitude and the phase of this tunneling parameter, experimentally realizing the Peierls substitution for ultracold neutral atoms.


Nature Physics | 2011

A synthetic electric force acting on neutral atoms

Yu-Ju Lin; Robert L. Compton; Karina Jimenez-Garcia; William D. Phillips; J. V. Porto; I. B. Spielman

In electromagnetism, the vector potential generates magnetic fields through its spatial variation and electric fields through its time dependence. Now, it is demonstrated that, by engineering a time-varying vector potential acting on an atomic Bose–Einstein condensate, a synthetic gauge field can be generated that has the effect of an electric field on the atoms, even if these are neutral.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Direct observation of zitterbewegung in a Bose–Einstein condensate

Lindsay J. LeBlanc; Matthew Beeler; Karina Jimenez-Garcia; Abigail R. Perry; Seiji Sugawa; Ross Williams; I. B. Spielman

Zitterbewegung, a force-free trembling motion first predicted for relativistic fermions like electrons, was an unexpected consequence of the Dirac equations unification of quantum mechanics and special relativity. Though the oscillatory motions large frequency and small amplitude have precluded its measurement with electrons, zitterbewegung is observable via quantum simulation. We engineered an environment for 87Rb Bose–Einstein condensates where the constituent atoms behaved like relativistic particles subject to the one-dimensional Dirac equation. With direct imaging, we observed the sub-micrometre trembling motion of these clouds, demonstrating the utility of neutral ultracold quantum gases for simulating Dirac particles.


Science | 2012

Synthetic partial waves in ultracold atomic collisions

Ross Williams; Lindsay J. LeBlanc; Karina Jimenez-Garcia; Matthew Beeler; Abigail R. Perry; William D. Phillips; I. B. Spielman

Extending the Range Ultracold atomic gases are attractive for quantum simulations of condensed-matter systems because of their tunability; however, while the strength of interactions can be tuned, their range is effectively zero. Williams et al. (p. 314, published online 8 December) used a pair of Raman lasers to modify the interaction between two colliding Bose-Einstein condensates to include beyond–s-wave (d- and g-wave) contributions. This technique should enable the simulation of more complicated solid-state systems, including those supporting exotic superfluidity. A pair of lasers is used produce complex interactions between bosons in an ultracold gas. Interactions between particles can be strongly altered by their environment. We demonstrate a technique for modifying interactions between ultracold atoms by dressing the bare atomic states with light, creating an effective interaction of vastly increased range that scatters states of finite relative angular momentum at collision energies where only s-wave scattering would normally be expected. We collided two optically dressed neutral atomic Bose-Einstein condensates with equal, and opposite, momenta and observed that the usual s-wave distribution of scattered atoms was altered by the appearance of d- and g-wave contributions. This technique is expected to enable quantum simulation of exotic systems, including those predicted to support Majorana fermions.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Raman-induced interactions in a single-component Fermi gas near an s-wave Feshbach resonance.

Ross Williams; Matthew Beeler; Lindsay J. LeBlanc; Karina Jimenez-Garcia; I. B. Spielman

Ultracold gases of interacting spin-orbit coupled fermions are predicted to display exotic phenomena such as topological superfluidity and its associated Majorana fermions. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a route to strongly-interacting single-component atomic Fermi gases by combining an s-wave Feshbach resonance (giving strong interactions) and spin-orbit coupling (creating an effective p-wave channel). We identify the Feshbach resonance by its associated atomic loss feature and show that, in agreement with our single-channel scattering model, this feature is preserved and shifted as a function of the spin-orbit coupling parameters.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Tunable spin-orbit coupling via strong driving in ultracold-atom systems

Karina Jimenez-Garcia; Lindsay J. LeBlanc; Ross Williams; Matthew Beeler; Chunlei Qu; Ming Gong; Chuanwei Zhang; I. B. Spielman

Spin-orbit coupling is an essential ingredient in topological materials, conventional and quantum-gas-based alike. Engineered spin-orbit coupling in ultracold-atom systems-unique in their experimental control and measurement opportunities-provides a major opportunity to investigate and understand topological phenomena. Here we experimentally demonstrate and theoretically analyze a technique for controlling spin-orbit coupling in a two-component Bose-Einstein condensate using amplitude-modulated Raman coupling.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Geometric scaling of Efimov states in a ⁶Li-¹³³Cs mixture.

Shih-Kuang Tung; Karina Jimenez-Garcia; Jacob Johansen; Colin Parker; Cheng Chin

In few-body physics, Efimov states are an infinite series of three-body bound states that obey universal discrete scaling symmetry when pairwise interactions are resonantly enhanced. Despite abundant reports of Efimov states in recent cold atom experiments, direct observation of the discrete scaling symmetry remains an elusive goal. Here we report the observation of three consecutive Efimov resonances in a heteronuclear Li-Cs mixture near a broad interspecies Feshbach resonance. The positions of the resonances closely follow a geometric series 1, λ, λ². The observed scaling constant λ(exp)=4.9(4) is in good agreement with the predicted value of 4.88.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Observation of a superfluid Hall effect

Lindsay J. LeBlanc; Karina Jimenez-Garcia; Ross Williams; Matthew Beeler; Abigail R. Perry; William D. Phillips; I. B. Spielman

Measurement techniques based upon the Hall effect are invaluable tools in condensed-matter physics. When an electric current flows perpendicular to a magnetic field, a Hall voltage develops in the direction transverse to both the current and the field. In semiconductors, this behavior is routinely used to measure the density and charge of the current carriers (electrons in conduction bands or holes in valence bands)—internal properties of the system that are not accessible from measurements of the conventional resistance. For strongly interacting electron systems, whose behavior can be very different from the free electron gas, the Hall effect’s sensitivity to internal properties makes it a powerful tool; indeed, the quantum Hall effects are named after the tool by which they are most distinctly measured instead of the physics from which the phenomena originate. Here we report the first observation of a Hall effect in an ultracold gas of neutral atoms, revealed by measuring a Bose–Einstein condensate’s transport properties perpendicular to a synthetic magnetic field. Our observations in this vortex-free superfluid are in good agreement with hydrodynamic predictions, demonstrating that the system’s global irrotationality influences this superfluid Hall signal.

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I. B. Spielman

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Matthew Beeler

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Ross Williams

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Abigail R. Perry

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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William D. Phillips

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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J. V. Porto

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Yu-Ju Lin

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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