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Dive into the research topics where Logan W. Clark is active.

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Featured researches published by Logan W. Clark.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Quantum Dynamics with Spatiotemporal Control of Interactions in a Stable Bose-Einstein Condensate.

Logan W. Clark; Li-Chung Ha; Chen-Yu Xu; Cheng Chin

Optical control of atomic interactions in quantum gases is a long-sought goal of cold atom research. Previous experiments have been hindered by rapid decay of the quantum gas and parasitic deformation of the trap potential. We develop and implement a generic scheme for optical control of Feshbach resonances which yields long quantum gas lifetimes and a negligible parasitic dipole force. We show that fast and local control of interactions leads to intriguing quantum dynamics in new regimes, highlighted by the formation of van der Waals molecules and localized collapse of a Bose condensate.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Roton-Maxon Excitation Spectrum of Bose Condensates in a Shaken Optical Lattice

Li-Chung Ha; Logan W. Clark; Colin Parker; Brandon M. Anderson; Cheng Chin

We present experimental evidence showing that an interacting Bose condensate in a shaken optical lattice develops a roton-maxon excitation spectrum, a feature normally associated with superfluid helium. The roton-maxon feature originates from the double-well dispersion in the shaken lattice, and can be controlled by both the atomic interaction and the lattice modulation amplitude. We determine the excitation spectrum using Bragg spectroscopy and measure the critical velocity by dragging a weak speckle potential through the condensate-both techniques are based on a digital micromirror device. Our dispersion measurements are in good agreement with a modified Bogoliubov model.


Science | 2016

Universal space-time scaling symmetry in the dynamics of bosons across a quantum phase transition

Logan W. Clark; Lei Feng; Cheng Chin

Shaking the lattice uncovers universality Most of our knowledge of quantum phase transitions (QPTs)—which occur as a result of quantum, rather than thermal, fluctuations—comes from experiments performed in equilibrium conditions. Less is known about the dynamics of a system going through a QPT, which have been hypothesized to depend on a single time and length scale. Clark et al. confirmed this hypothesis in a gas of cesium atoms in an optical lattice, which was shaken progressively faster to drive the gas through a QPT. Science, this issue p. 606 The dynamics of a gas of cesium atoms in a shaken optical lattice follows a universality hypothesis. The dynamics of many-body systems spanning condensed matter, cosmology, and beyond are hypothesized to be universal when the systems cross continuous phase transitions. The universal dynamics are expected to satisfy a scaling symmetry of space and time with the crossing rate, inspired by the Kibble-Zurek mechanism. We test this symmetry based on Bose condensates in a shaken optical lattice. Shaking the lattice drives condensates across an effectively ferromagnetic quantum phase transition. After crossing the critical point, the condensates manifest delayed growth of spin fluctuations and develop antiferromagnetic spatial correlations resulting from the sub-Poisson distribution of the spacing between topological defects. The fluctuations and correlations are invariant in scaled space-time coordinates, in support of the scaling symmetry of quantum critical dynamics.


Nature Physics | 2018

A strongly interacting polaritonic quantum dot

Ningyuan Jia; Nathan Schine; Alexandros Georgakopoulos; Albert Ryou; Logan W. Clark; Ariel Sommer; Jonathan Simon

Polaritons are promising constituents of both synthetic quantum matter1 and quantum information processors2, whose properties emerge from their components: from light, polaritons draw fast dynamics and ease of transport; from matter, they inherit the ability to collide with one another. Cavity polaritons are particularly promising as they may be confined and subjected to synthetic magnetic fields controlled by cavity geometry3, and furthermore they benefit from increased robustness due to the cavity enhancement in light–matter coupling. Nonetheless, until now, cavity polaritons have operated only in a weakly interacting mean-field regime4,5. Here we demonstrate strong interactions between individual cavity polaritons enabled by employing highly excited Rydberg atoms as the matter component of the polaritons. We assemble a quantum dot composed of approximately 150 strongly interacting Rydberg-dressed 87Rb atoms in a cavity, and observe blockaded transport of photons through it. We further observe coherent photon tunnelling oscillations, demonstrating that the dot is zero-dimensional. This work establishes the cavity Rydberg polariton as a candidate qubit in a photonic information processor and, by employing multiple resonator modes as the spatial degrees of freedom of a photonic particle, the primary ingredient to form photonic quantum matter6.Cavity polaritons whose matter component is composed of highly excited Rydberg atoms are shown to act as a zero-dimensional quantum dot. Trapping 150 polaritons led to the observation of blockaded photon transport.


Optics Express | 2017

Calibrating high intensity absorption imaging of ultracold atoms

Klaus Hueck; Niclas Luick; Lennart Sobirey; Jonas Siegl; Thomas Lompe; Henning Moritz; Logan W. Clark; Cheng Chin

Absorption imaging of ultracold atoms is the foundation for quantitative extraction of information from experiments with ultracold atoms. Due to the limited exposure time available in these systems, the signal-to-noise ratio is largest for high intensity absorption imaging where the intensity of the imaging light is on the order of the saturation intensity. In this case, the absolute value of the intensity of the imaging light enters as an additional parameter making it more sensitive to systematic errors. Here, we present a novel and robust technique to determine the imaging beam intensity in units of the effective saturation intensity to better than 5%. We do this by measuring the momentum transferred to the atoms by the imaging light while varying its intensity. We further utilize the method to quantify the purity of the polarization of the imaging light and to determine the correct imaging detuning.


Nature Physics | 2017

Coherent inflationary dynamics for Bose–Einstein condensates crossing a quantum critical point

Lei Feng; Logan W. Clark; Anita Gaj; Cheng Chin

Quantum phase transitions, transitions between many-body ground states, are of extensive interest in research ranging from condensed-matter physics to cosmology1–4. Key features of the phase transitions include a stage with rapidly growing new order, called inflation in cosmology5, followed by the formation of topological defects6–8. How inflation is initiated and evolves into topological defects remains a hot topic of debate. Ultracold atomic gas offers a pristine and tunable platform to investigate quantum critical dynamics9–21. We report the observation of coherent inflationary dynamics across a quantum critical point in driven Bose–Einstein condensates. The inflation manifests in the exponential growth of density waves and populations in well-resolved momentum states. After the inflation stage, extended coherent dynamics is evident in both real and momentum space. We present an intuitive description of the quantum critical dynamics in our system and demonstrate the essential role of phase fluctuations in the formation of topological defects.An ultracold quantum gas experiment shows that, when it crosses the many-body phase transition, the original ground state can evolve coherently into the new emergent phase, reflecting the initial global coherence presented in the system.


Nature | 2017

Collective emission of matter-wave jets from driven Bose–Einstein condensates

Logan W. Clark; Anita Gaj; Lei Feng; Cheng Chin

Scattering is used to probe matter and its interactions in all areas of physics. In ultracold atomic gases, control over pairwise interactions enables us to investigate scattering in quantum many-body systems. Previous experiments on colliding Bose–Einstein condensates have revealed matter–wave interference, haloes of scattered atoms, four-wave mixing and correlations between counter-propagating pairs. However, a regime with strong stimulation of spontaneous collisions analogous to superradiance has proved elusive. In this regime, the collisions rapidly produce highly correlated states with macroscopic population. Here we find that runaway stimulated collisions in Bose–Einstein condensates with periodically modulated interaction strength cause the collective emission of matter-wave jets that resemble fireworks. Jets appear only above a threshold modulation amplitude and their correlations are invariant even when the number of ejected atoms grows exponentially. Hence, we show that the structures and atom occupancies of the jets stem from the quantum fluctuations of the condensate. Our findings demonstrate the conditions required for runaway stimulated collisions and reveal the quantum nature of matter-wave emission.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Direct Lattice Shaking of Bose Condensates: Finite Momentum Superfluids

Brandon M. Anderson; Logan W. Clark; Jennifer Crawford; Andreas Glatz; Igor S. Aranson; Peter Scherpelz; Lei Feng; Cheng Chin; K. Levin


arXiv: Quantum Gases | 2018

Density waves and jet emission asymmetry in Bose Fireworks.

Han Fu; Lei Feng; Brandon M. Anderson; Logan W. Clark; Jiazhong Hu; Jeffery W. Andrade; Cheng Chin; K. Levin


arXiv: Quantum Gases | 2018

Interacting Floquet polaritons

Logan W. Clark; Ningyuan Jia; Nathan Schine; Claire Baum; Alexandros Georgakopoulos; Jonathan Simon

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Lei Feng

University of Chicago

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Anita Gaj

University of Stuttgart

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K. Levin

University of Chicago

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Andreas Glatz

Argonne National Laboratory

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