Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Lawrence W. Cheuk is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Lawrence W. Cheuk.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Spin-Injection Spectroscopy of a Spin-Orbit Coupled Fermi Gas

Lawrence W. Cheuk; Ariel Sommer; Zoran Hadzibabic; Tarik Yefsah; Waseem Bakr; Martin Zwierlein

The coupling of the spin of electrons to their motional state lies at the heart of recently discovered topological phases of matter. Here we create and detect spin-orbit coupling in an atomic Fermi gas, a highly controllable form of quantum degenerate matter. We directly reveal the spin-orbit gap via spin-injection spectroscopy, which characterizes the energy-momentum dispersion and spin composition of the quantum states. For energies within the spin-orbit gap, the system acts as a spin diode. We also create a spin-orbit coupled lattice and probe its spinful band structure, which features additional spin gaps and a fully gapped spectrum. In the presence of s-wave interactions, such systems should display induced p-wave pairing, topological superfluidity, and Majorana edge states.


Science | 2012

Revealing the Superfluid Lambda Transition in the Universal Thermodynamics of a Unitary Fermi Gas

Mark Ku; Ariel Sommer; Lawrence W. Cheuk; Martin Zwierlein

Nailing Down the Superfluid Transition A gas of fermions, the class of particle that protons, neutrons, and electrons belong to, can be found in contexts as different as neutron stars and a block of metal. When the interaction between fermions is on the brink of forming fermion pairs, the thermodynamics of the gas become dependent only on the gas temperature and density. Ku et al. (p. 563, published online 12 January; see the Perspective by Zwerger) measured this universal thermodynamics with high precision in an ultracold Fermi gas, observing the predicted transition into a superfluid state through the characteristic lambda-shaped transition in the gass specific heat. Thermodynamic quantities for the superfluid transition of a strongly interacting atomic Fermi gas were measured. Fermi gases, collections of fermions such as neutrons and electrons, are found throughout nature, from solids to neutron stars. Interacting Fermi gases can form a superfluid or, for charged fermions, a superconductor. We have observed the superfluid phase transition in a strongly interacting Fermi gas by high-precision measurements of the local compressibility, density, and pressure. Our data completely determine the universal thermodynamics of these gases without any fit or external thermometer. The onset of superfluidity is observed in the compressibility, the chemical potential, the entropy, and the heat capacity, which displays a characteristic lambda-like feature at the critical temperature Tc/TF = 0.167(13). The ground-state energy is 35 ξN EF with ξ = 0.376(4). Our measurements provide a benchmark for many-body theories of strongly interacting fermions.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Quantum-Gas Microscope for Fermionic Atoms

Lawrence W. Cheuk; Matthew Alan Nichols; Melih Okan; Thomas Gersdorf; Vinay Ramasesh; Waseem Bakr; Thomas Lompe; Martin Zwierlein

We realize a quantum-gas microscope for fermionic ^{40}K atoms trapped in an optical lattice, which allows one to probe strongly correlated fermions at the single-atom level. We combine 3D Raman sideband cooling with high-resolution optics to simultaneously cool and image individual atoms with single-lattice-site resolution at a detection fidelity above 95%. The imaging process leaves the atoms predominantly in the 3D motional ground state of their respective lattice sites, inviting the implementation of a Maxwells demon to assemble low-entropy many-body states. Single-site-resolved imaging of fermions enables the direct observation of magnetic order, time-resolved measurements of the spread of particle correlations, and the detection of many-fermion entanglement.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Evolution of Fermion Pairing from Three to Two Dimensions

Ariel Sommer; Lawrence W. Cheuk; Mark Ku; Waseem Bakr; Martin Zwierlein

We follow the evolution of fermion pairing in the dimensional crossover from three-dimensional to two-dimensional as a strongly interacting Fermi gas of ^{6}Li atoms becomes confined to a stack of two-dimensional layers formed by a one-dimensional optical lattice. Decreasing the dimensionality leads to the opening of a gap in radio-frequency spectra, even on the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer side of a Feshbach resonance. The measured binding energy of fermion pairs closely follows the theoretical two-body binding energy and, in the two-dimensional limit, the zero-temperature mean-field Bose-Einstein-condensation to Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer crossover theory.


Science | 2016

Observation of spatial charge and spin correlations in the 2D Fermi-Hubbard model

Lawrence W. Cheuk; Matthew A. Nichols; Katherine R. Lawrence; Melih Okan; Hao Zhang; Ehsan Khatami; Nandini Trivedi; Thereza Paiva; Marcos Rigol; Martin Zwierlein

Strong electron correlations lie at the origin of high-temperature superconductivity. Its essence is believed to be captured by the Fermi-Hubbard model of repulsively interacting fermions on a lattice. Here we report on the site-resolved observation of charge and spin correlations in the two-dimensional (2D) Fermi-Hubbard model realized with ultracold atoms. Antiferromagnetic spin correlations are maximal at half-filling and weaken monotonically upon doping. At large doping, nearest-neighbor correlations between singly charged sites are negative, revealing the formation of a correlation hole, the suppressed probability of finding two fermions near each other. As the doping is reduced, the correlations become positive, signaling strong bunching of doublons and holes, in agreement with numerical calculations. The dynamics of the doublon-hole correlations should play an important role for transport in the Fermi-Hubbard model.


Nature | 2013

Heavy Solitons in a Fermionic Superfluid

Tarik Yefsah; Ariel Sommer; Mark Ku; Lawrence W. Cheuk; Wenjie Ji; Waseem Bakr; Martin Zwierlein

Solitons—solitary waves that maintain their shape as they propagate—occur as water waves in narrow canals, as light pulses in optical fibres and as quantum mechanical matter waves in superfluids and superconductors. Their highly nonlinear and localized nature makes them very sensitive probes of the medium in which they propagate. Here we create long-lived solitons in a strongly interacting superfluid of fermionic atoms and directly observe their motion. As the interactions are tuned from the regime of Bose–Einstein condensation of tightly bound molecules towards the Bardeen–Cooper–Schrieffer limit of long-range Cooper pairs, the solitons’ effective mass increases markedly, to more than 200 times their bare mass, signalling strong quantum fluctuations. This mass enhancement is more than 50 times larger than the theoretically predicted value. Our work provides a benchmark for theories of non-equilibrium dynamics of strongly interacting fermions.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Motion of a solitonic vortex in the BEC-BCS crossover.

Mark Ku; Wenjie Ji; Biswaroop Mukherjee; Elmer Guardado-Sanchez; Lawrence W. Cheuk; Tarik Yefsah; Martin Zwierlein

We observe a long-lived solitary wave in a superfluid Fermi gas of (6)Li atoms after phase imprinting. Tomographic imaging reveals the excitation to be a solitonic vortex, oriented transverse to the long axis of the cigar-shaped atom cloud. The precessional motion of the vortex is directly observed, and its period is measured as a function of the chemical potential in the BEC-BCS crossover. The long period and the correspondingly large ratio of the inertial to the bare mass of the vortex are in good agreement with estimates based on superfluid hydrodynamics that we derive here using the known equation of state in the BEC-BCS crossover.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Observation of 2D Fermionic Mott Insulators of ^{40}K with Single-Site Resolution.

Lawrence W. Cheuk; Matthew Nichols; Katherine R. Lawrence; Melih Okan; Hao Zhang; Martin Zwierlein

We report on the site-resolved observation of characteristic states of the two-dimensional repulsive Fermi-Hubbard model, using ultracold ^{40}K atoms in an optical lattice. By varying the tunneling, interaction strength, and external confinement, we realize metallic, Mott-insulating, and band-insulating states. We directly measure the local moment, which quantifies the degree of on-site magnetization, as a function of temperature and chemical potential. Entropies per particle as low as 0.99(6)k_{B} indicate that nearest-neighbor antiferromagnetic correlations should be detectable using spin-sensitive imaging.


Physics | 2012

Fermion Pairing in Flatland

Mohit Randeria; Ariel Sommer; Lawrence W. Cheuk; Mark Ku; Waseem Bakr; Martin Zwierlein


arXiv: Quantum Gases | 2018

Spin Transport in a Mott Insulator of Ultracold Fermions

Matthew Nichols; Lawrence W. Cheuk; Melih Okan; Thomas Hartke; Enrique Mendez; T. Senthil; Ehsan Khatami; Hao Zhang; Martin Zwierlein

Collaboration


Dive into the Lawrence W. Cheuk's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Martin Zwierlein

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark Ku

University of Florence

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ariel Sommer

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hao Zhang

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Katherine R. Lawrence

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tarik Yefsah

École Normale Supérieure

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge