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Dive into the research topics where Martin Zwierlein is active.

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Featured researches published by Martin Zwierlein.


Physical Review Letters | 2004

Condensation of Pairs of Fermionic Atoms near a Feshbach Resonance

Martin Zwierlein; C. A. Stan; Christian H. Schunck; S. M. F. Raupach; A. J. Kerman; Wolfgang Ketterle

We have observed Bose-Einstein condensation of pairs of fermionic atoms in an ultracold 6Li gas at magnetic fields above a Feshbach resonance, where no stable 6Li2 molecules would exist in vacuum. We accurately determined the position of the resonance to be 822+/-3 G. Molecular Bose-Einstein condensates were detected after a fast magnetic field ramp, which transferred pairs of atoms at close distances into bound molecules. Condensate fractions as high as 80% were obtained. The large condensate fractions are interpreted in terms of preexisting molecules which are quasistable even above the two-body Feshbach resonance due to the presence of the degenerate Fermi gas.


international quantum electronics conference | 2004

Observation of bose-einstein condensation of molecules

Martin Zwierlein; C. A. Stan; Christian H. Schunck; S. M. F. Raupach; Wolfgang Ketterle

We have observed Bose-Einstein condensation of molecules, created from a spin mixture of fermionic 6Li atoms. The condensate realizes the limit of tightly bound fermion pairs in the crossover between BCS and BEC superfluidity


Nature | 2005

Vortices and superfluidity in a strongly interacting Fermi gas

Martin Zwierlein; J. R. Abo-Shaeer; Andre Schirotzek; Christian H. Schunck; Wolfgang Ketterle

Quantum degenerate Fermi gases provide a remarkable opportunity to study strongly interacting fermions. In contrast to other Fermi systems, such as superconductors, neutron stars or the quark-gluon plasma of the early Universe, these gases have low densities and their interactions can be precisely controlled over an enormous range. Previous experiments with Fermi gases have revealed condensation of fermion pairs. Although these and other studies were consistent with predictions assuming superfluidity, proof of superfluid behaviour has been elusive. Here we report observations of vortex lattices in a strongly interacting, rotating Fermi gas that provide definitive evidence for superfluidity. The interaction and therefore the pairing strength between two 6Li fermions near a Feshbach resonance can be controlled by an external magnetic field. This allows us to explore the crossover from a Bose–Einstein condensate of molecules to a Bardeen–Cooper–Schrieffer superfluid of loosely bound pairs. The crossover is associated with a new form of superfluidity that may provide insights into high-transition-temperature superconductors.


Science | 2006

Fermionic Superfluidity with Imbalanced Spin Populations

Martin Zwierlein; Andre Schirotzek; Christian H. Schunck; Wolfgang Ketterle

We established superfluidity in a two-state mixture of ultracold fermionic atoms with imbalanced state populations. This study relates to the long-standing debate about the nature of the superfluid state in Fermi systems. Indicators for superfluidity were condensates of fermion pairs and vortices in rotating clouds. For strong interactions, near a Feshbach resonance, superfluidity was observed for a broad range of population imbalances. We mapped out the superfluid regime as a function of interaction strength and population imbalance and characterized the quantum phase transition to the normal state, known as the Pauli limit of superfluidity.


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.


Physical Review Letters | 2002

Two-species mixture of quantum degenerate Bose and Fermi gases.

Zoran Hadzibabic; C. A. Stan; K. Dieckmann; Subhadeep Gupta; Martin Zwierlein; A. Görlitz; Wolfgang Ketterle

We have produced a macroscopic quantum system in which a 6Li Fermi sea coexists with a large and stable 23Na Bose-Einstein condensate. This was accomplished using interspecies sympathetic cooling of fermionic 6Li in a thermal bath of bosonic 23Na. The system features rapid thermalization and long lifetimes.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Observation of Phase Separation in a Strongly-Interacting Imbalanced Fermi Gas

Yong-il Shin; Martin Zwierlein; Christian H. Schunck; Andre Schirotzek; Wolfgang Ketterle

We have observed phase separation between the superfluid and the normal component in a strongly interacting Fermi gas with imbalanced spin populations. The in situ distribution of the density difference between two trapped spin components is obtained using phase-contrast imaging and 3D image reconstruction. A shell structure is clearly identified where the superfluid region of equal densities is surrounded by a normal gas of unequal densities. The phase transition induces a dramatic change in the density profiles as excess fermions are expelled from the superfluid.


arXiv: Quantum Gases | 2012

The BCS–BEC Crossover and the Unitary Fermi Gas

Mohit Randeria; Wilhelm Zwerger; Martin Zwierlein

There has been great excitement about the recent experimental and theoretical progress in elucidating the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) to Bose Einstein condensation (BEC) crossover in ultracold Fermi gases. Prior to these cold atom experiments, all known, and reasonably well understood, superconductors and superfluids were firmly in one of the two limits. Either they were well described by the celebrated BCS theory of pairing in Fermi systems, or they could be understood in terms of the BEC of bosons, with repulsive interactions. For the first time, the ultracold Fermi gases exhibited behavior that, with the turn of a knob, could be made to span the entire range from BCS to BEC. While such a crossover had been theoretically predicted, its actual realization in the laboratory was a major advance [1, 2], and led to intense investigation of the properties of the very strongly interacting, unitary regime that lies right in the middle of the crossover. We now understand that the unitary Fermi gas has remarkable universal properties, arising from scale invariance, and has connections with fields as diverse as nuclear physics and string theory.


arXiv: Other Condensed Matter | 2008

Making, probing and understanding ultracold Fermi gases

Wolfgang Ketterle; Martin Zwierlein

A review on superfluidity and the BEC-BCS crossover in ultracold Fermi gases.


Science | 2003

Radio-Frequency Spectroscopy of Ultracold Fermions

Subhadeep Gupta; Zoran Hadzibabic; Martin Zwierlein; Claudiu A. Stan; Kai Dieckmann; Christian H. Schunck; van Egm Eric Kempen; Bj Boudewijn Verhaar; Wolfgang Ketterle

Radio-frequency techniques were used to study ultracold fermions. We observed the absence of mean-field “clock” shifts, the dominant source of systematic error in current atomic clocks based on bosonic atoms. This absence is a direct consequence of fermionic antisymmetry. Resonance shifts proportional to interaction strengths were observed in a three-level system. However, in the strongly interacting regime, these shifts became very small, reflecting the quantum unitarity limit and many-body effects. This insight into an interacting Fermi gas is relevant for the quest to observe superfluidity in this system.

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Wolfgang Ketterle

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Jee Woo Park

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Ariel Sommer

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Mark Ku

University of Florence

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Sebastian Will

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Cheng-Hsun Wu

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Tarik Yefsah

École Normale Supérieure

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