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Dive into the research topics where Katharina Lauber is active.

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Featured researches published by Katharina Lauber.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Quantum quench in an atomic one-dimensional Ising chain.

Florian Meinert; Manfred J. Mark; Emil Kirilov; Katharina Lauber; Philipp Weinmann; Andrew J. Daley; Hanns-Christoph Nägerl

We study nonequilibrium dynamics for an ensemble of tilted one-dimensional atomic Bose-Hubbard chains after a sudden quench to the vicinity of the transition point of the Ising paramagnetic to antiferromagnetic quantum phase transition. The quench results in coherent oscillations for the orientation of effective Ising spins, detected via oscillations in the number of doubly occupied lattice sites. We characterize the quench by varying the system parameters. We report significant modification of the tunneling rate induced by interactions and show clear evidence for collective effects in the oscillatory response.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Precision measurements on a tunable Mott insulator of ultracold atoms.

Manfred J. Mark; Elmar Haller; Katharina Lauber; Johann G. Danzl; Andrew J. Daley; Hanns-Christoph Nägerl

We perform precision measurements on a Mott-insulator quantum state of ultracold atoms with tunable interactions. We probe the dependence of the superfluid-to-Mott-insulator transition on the interaction strength and explore the limits of the standard Bose-Hubbard model description. By tuning the on-site interaction energies to values comparable to the interband separation, we are able to quantitatively measure number-dependent shifts in the excitation spectrum caused by effective multibody interactions.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Interaction-induced quantum phase revivals and evidence for the transition to the quantum chaotic regime in 1D atomic Bloch oscillations.

Florian Meinert; Manfred J. Mark; Emil Kirilov; Katharina Lauber; Philipp Weinmann; Michael Gröbner; Hanns-Christoph Nägerl

We study atomic Bloch oscillations in an ensemble of one-dimensional tilted superfluids in the Bose-Hubbard regime. For large values of the tilt, we observe interaction-induced coherent decay and matter-wave quantum phase revivals of the Bloch oscillating ensemble. We analyze the revival period dependence on interactions by means of a Feshbach resonance. When reducing the value of the tilt, we observe the disappearance of the quasiperiodic phase revival signature towards an irreversible decay of Bloch oscillations, indicating the transition from regular to quantum chaotic dynamics.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Probing the Excitations of a Lieb-Liniger Gas from Weak to Strong Coupling.

Florian Meinert; Milosz Panfil; Manfred J. Mark; Katharina Lauber; Jean-Sébastien Caux; Hanns-Christoph Nägerl

We probe the excitation spectrum of an ultracold one-dimensional Bose gas of cesium atoms with a repulsive contact interaction that we tune from the weakly to the strongly interacting regime via a magnetic Feshbach resonance. The dynamical structure factor, experimentally obtained using Bragg spectroscopy, is compared to integrability-based calculations valid at arbitrary interactions and finite temperatures. Our results unequivocally underlie the fact that holelike excitations, which have no counterpart in higher dimensions, actively shape the dynamical response of the gas.


Science | 2013

Observation of many-body long-range tunneling after a quantum quench

Florian Meinert; Manfred J. Mark; Emil Kirilov; Katharina Lauber; Philipp Weinmann; Michael Gröbner; Andrew J. Daley; Hanns-Christoph Nägerl

Tilting just right makes atoms tunnel One of the most fascinating phenomena in the quantum world is the ability of particles to go through an energy barrier — a process called quantum tunneling. Meinert et al. studied the dynamics of quantum tunneling in an optical lattice of strongly interacting atoms. When the lattice was suddenly tilted, the atoms, originally each in their own lattice site, tunneled to non-neighboring sites. Science, this issue p. 1259 The dynamics of ultracold atoms are observed as the optical lattice that houses them is suddenly tilted. Quantum tunneling is at the heart of many low-temperature phenomena. In strongly correlated lattice systems, tunneling is responsible for inducing effective interactions, and long-range tunneling substantially alters many-body properties in and out of equilibrium. We observe resonantly enhanced long-range quantum tunneling in one-dimensional Mott-insulating Hubbard chains that are suddenly quenched into a tilted configuration. Higher-order tunneling processes over up to five lattice sites are observed as resonances in the number of doubly occupied sites when the tilt per site is tuned to integer fractions of the Mott gap. This forms a basis for a controlled study of many-body dynamics driven by higher-order tunneling and demonstrates that when some degrees of freedom are frozen out, phenomena that are driven by small-amplitude tunneling terms can still be observed.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Floquet Engineering of Correlated Tunneling in the Bose-Hubbard Model with Ultracold Atoms.

Florian Meinert; Manfred J. Mark; Katharina Lauber; Andrew J. Daley; Hanns-Christoph Nägerl

We report on the experimental implementation of tunable occupation-dependent tunneling in a Bose-Hubbard system of ultracold atoms via time-periodic modulation of the on-site interaction energy. The tunneling rate is inferred from a time-resolved measurement of the lattice site occupation after a quantum quench. We demonstrate coherent control of the tunneling dynamics in the correlated many-body system, including full suppression of tunneling as predicted within the framework of Floquet theory. We find that the tunneling rate explicitly depends on the atom number difference in neighboring lattice sites. Our results may open up ways to realize artificial gauge fields that feature density dependence with ultracold atoms.


Science | 2014

Observation of many-body dynamics in long-range tunneling after a quantum quench

Florian Meinert; Manfred J. Mark; Emil Kirilov; Katharina Lauber; Philipp Weinmann; Michael Gröbner; Andrew J. Daley; Hanns-Christoph Nägerl

Tilting just right makes atoms tunnel One of the most fascinating phenomena in the quantum world is the ability of particles to go through an energy barrier — a process called quantum tunneling. Meinert et al. studied the dynamics of quantum tunneling in an optical lattice of strongly interacting atoms. When the lattice was suddenly tilted, the atoms, originally each in their own lattice site, tunneled to non-neighboring sites. Science, this issue p. 1259 The dynamics of ultracold atoms are observed as the optical lattice that houses them is suddenly tilted. Quantum tunneling is at the heart of many low-temperature phenomena. In strongly correlated lattice systems, tunneling is responsible for inducing effective interactions, and long-range tunneling substantially alters many-body properties in and out of equilibrium. We observe resonantly enhanced long-range quantum tunneling in one-dimensional Mott-insulating Hubbard chains that are suddenly quenched into a tilted configuration. Higher-order tunneling processes over up to five lattice sites are observed as resonances in the number of doubly occupied sites when the tilt per site is tuned to integer fractions of the Mott gap. This forms a basis for a controlled study of many-body dynamics driven by higher-order tunneling and demonstrates that when some degrees of freedom are frozen out, phenomena that are driven by small-amplitude tunneling terms can still be observed.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Three-body correlation functions and recombination rates for bosons in three dimensions and one dimension.

Elmar Haller; M. Rabie; M. Mark; Johann G. Danzl; Russell Hart; Katharina Lauber; Guido Pupillo; Hanns-Christoph Naegerl

We investigate local three-body correlations for bosonic particles in three dimensions and one dimension as a function of the interaction strength. The three-body correlation function g(3) is determined by measuring the three-body recombination rate in an ultracold gas of Cs atoms. In three dimensions, we measure the dependence of g(3) on the gas parameter in a BEC, finding good agreement with the theoretical prediction accounting for beyond-mean-field effects. In one dimension, we observe a reduction of g(3) by several orders of magnitude upon increasing interactions from the weakly interacting BEC to the strongly interacting Tonks-Girardeau regime, in good agreement with predictions from the Lieb-Liniger model for all strengths of interaction.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Preparation and spectroscopy of a metastable Mott-insulator state with attractive interactions.

Manfred J. Mark; Elmar Haller; Katharina Lauber; Johann G. Danzl; A. Janisch; H. P. Buechler; Andrew J. Daley; Hanns-Christoph Naegerl

We prepare and study a metastable attractive Mott-insulator state formed with bosonic atoms in a three-dimensional optical lattice. Starting from a Mott insulator with Cs atoms at weak repulsive interactions, we use a magnetic Feshbach resonance to tune the interactions to large attractive values and produce a metastable state pinned by attractive interactions with a lifetime on the order of 10 s. We probe the (de)excitation spectrum via lattice modulation spectroscopy, measuring the interaction dependence of two- and three-body bound-state energies. As a result of increased on-site three-body loss we observe resonance broadening and suppression of tunneling processes that produce three-body occupation.


New Journal of Physics | 2011

Demonstration of the temporal matter-wave Talbot effect for trapped matter waves

Manfred J. Mark; Elmar Haller; Johann G. Danzl; Katharina Lauber; Mattias Gustavsson; Hanns-Christoph Nägerl

We demonstrate the temporal Talbot effect for trapped matter waves using ultracold atoms in an optical lattice. We investigate the phase evolution of an array of essentially non-interacting matter waves and observe matter-wave collapse and revival in the form of a Talbot interference pattern. By using long expansion times, we image momentum space with sub-recoil resolution, allowing us to observe fractional Talbot fringes up to tenth order.

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Elmar Haller

University of Innsbruck

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A. Janisch

University of Stuttgart

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