Marie Bonneau
London College of Fashion
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Featured researches published by Marie Bonneau.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
Jean-Christophe Jaskula; Guthrie B. Partridge; Marie Bonneau; Raphael Lopes; Josselin Ruaudel; Denis Boiron; C. I. Westbrook
We have modulated the density of a trapped Bose-Einstein condensate by changing the trap stiffness, thereby modulating the speed of sound. We observe the creation of correlated excitations with equal and opposite momenta, and show that for a well-defined modulation frequency, the frequency of the excitations is half that of the trap modulation frequency.
Physical Review Letters | 2010
Jean-Christophe Jaskula; Marie Bonneau; Guthrie B. Partridge; Valentina Krachmalnicoff; P. Deuar; K. V. Kheruntsyan; Alain Aspect; Denis Boiron; C. I. Westbrook
We demonstrate sub-Poissonian number differences in four-wave mixing of Bose-Einstein condensates of metastable helium. The collision between two Bose-Einstein condensates produces a scattering halo populated by pairs of atoms of opposing velocities, which we divide into several symmetric zones. We show that the atom number difference for opposing zones has sub-Poissonian noise fluctuations, whereas that of nonopposing zones is well described by shot noise. The atom pairs produced in a dual number state are well adapted to sub-shot-noise interferometry and studies of Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen-type nonlocality tests.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
K. V. Kheruntsyan; Jean-Christophe Jaskula; P. Deuar; Marie Bonneau; Guthrie B. Partridge; Josselin Ruaudel; Raphael Lopes; Denis Boiron; C. I. Westbrook
The Cauchy-Schwarz (CS) inequality-one of the most widely used and important inequalities in mathematics-can be formulated as an upper bound to the strength of correlations between classically fluctuating quantities. Quantum-mechanical correlations can, however, exceed classical bounds. Here we realize four-wave mixing of atomic matter waves using colliding Bose-Einstein condensates, and demonstrate the violation of a multimode CS inequality for atom number correlations in opposite zones of the collision halo. The correlated atoms have large spatial separations and therefore open new opportunities for extending fundamental quantum-nonlocality tests to ensembles of massive particles.
Physical Review Letters | 2010
Valentina Krachmalnicoff; Jean-Christophe Jaskula; Marie Bonneau; Vanessa Leung; Guthrie B. Partridge; Denis Boiron; C. I. Westbrook; P. Deuar; Paweł Ziń; Marek Trippenbach; K. V. Kheruntsyan
We investigate the atom-optical analog of degenerate four-wave mixing by colliding two Bose-Einstein condensates of metastable helium. The momentum distribution of the scattered atoms is measured in three dimensions. A simple analogy with photon phase matching conditions suggests a spherical final distribution. We find, however, that it is an ellipsoid with radii smaller than the initial collision momenta. Numerical and analytical calculations agree with this and reveal the interplay between many-body effects, mean-field interaction, and the anisotropy of the source condensate.
Scientific Reports | 2016
S. van Frank; Marie Bonneau; Jörg Schmiedmayer; Sebastian Hild; Christian Gross; Marc Cheneau; Immanuel Bloch; T. Pichler; A. Negretti; Tommaso Calarco; S. Montangero
Quantum technologies will ultimately require manipulating many-body quantum systems with high precision. Cold atom experiments represent a stepping stone in that direction: a high degree of control has been achieved on systems of increasing complexity. However, this control is still sub-optimal. In many scenarios, achieving a fast transformation is crucial to fight against decoherence and imperfection effects. Optimal control theory is believed to be the ideal candidate to bridge the gap between early stage proof-of-principle demonstrations and experimental protocols suitable for practical applications. Indeed, it can engineer protocols at the quantum speed limit – the fastest achievable timescale of the transformation. Here, we demonstrate such potential by computing theoretically and verifying experimentally the optimal transformations in two very different interacting systems: the coherent manipulation of motional states of an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate and the crossing of a quantum phase transition in small systems of cold atoms in optical lattices. We also show that such processes are robust with respect to perturbations, including temperature and atom number fluctuations.
Physical Review A | 2013
Marie Bonneau; Josselin Ruaudel; Raphael Lopes; Jean-Christophe Jaskula; Alain Aspect; Denis Boiron; C. I. Westbrook
We use a one-dimensional optical lattice to modify the dispersion relation of atomic matter waves. Four-wave mixing in this situation produces atom pairs in two well defined beams. We show that these beams present a narrow momentum correlation, that their momenta are precisely tunable, and that this pair source can be operated both in the regime of low mode occupancy and of high mode occupancy.
Physical Review A | 2014
P. Deuar; Jean-Christophe Jaskula; Marie Bonneau; Valentina Krachmalnicoff; Denis Boiron; C. I. Westbrook; K. V. Kheruntsyan
We report the experimental realization of a single-species atomic four-wave mixing process with BEC collisions for which the angular distribution of scattered atom pairs is not isotropic, despite the collisions being in the s-wave regime. Theoretical analysis indicates that this anomalous behavior can be explained by the anisotropic nature of the gain in the medium when the source clouds are not cylindrically symmetric around the collision axis. There are two competing anisotropic processes: classical trajectory deflections due to the mean-field potential, and Bose enhanced scattering. The bosonic enhancement process bears similarity to superradiance, although a consideration of the differences explains why it is more difficult to achieve strongly dominant end-fire modes with atom optics.
Physical Review A | 2010
Guthrie B. Partridge; Jean-Christophe Jaskula; Marie Bonneau; Denis Boiron; C. I. Westbrook
We report the realization of a Bose-Einstein condensate of metastable helium-4 atoms ({sup 4}He*) in an all-optical potential. Up to 10{sup 5} spin-polarized {sup 4}He* atoms are condensed in an optical dipole trap formed from a single, focused, vertically propagating far-off-resonance laser beam. The vertical trap geometry is chosen to best match the resolution characteristics of a delay-line anode microchannel plate detector capable of registering single He* atoms. We also confirm the instability of certain spin-state combinations of {sup 4}He* to two-body inelastic processes, which necessarily affects the scope of future experiments using optically trapped spin mixtures. In order to better quantify this constraint, we measure spin-state-resolved two-body inelastic loss rate coefficients in the optical trap.
Physical Review A | 2014
Raphael Lopes; Almazbek Imanaliev; Marie Bonneau; Josselin Ruaudel; Marc Cheneau; Denis Boiron; C. I. Westbrook
(Received 23 December 2013; published 16 July 2014)Wehavemeasuredthetwo-particlecorrelationfunctionofatomsfromaBose-Einsteincondensateparticipatingin a superradiance process, which directly reflects the second-order coherence of the emitted light. We comparethis correlation function with that of atoms undergoing stimulated emission. Whereas the stimulated processproduces correlations resembling those of a coherent state, we find that superradiance, even in the presenceof strong gain, shows a correlation function close to that of a thermal state, just as for ordinary spontaneousemission.DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevA.90.013615 PACS number(s): 03
Physical Review Letters | 2018
Marine Pigneur; Tarik Berrada; Marie Bonneau; Thorsten Schumm; Eugene Demler; Jörg Schmiedmayer