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Dive into the research topics where Patrick Cheinet is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrick Cheinet.


Science | 2008

Time-Resolved Observation and Control of Superexchange Interactions with Ultracold Atoms in Optical Lattices

Stefan Trotzky; Patrick Cheinet; Simon Fölling; M. Feld; U. Schnorrberger; Ana Maria Rey; Anatoli Polkovnikov; Eugene Demler; Mikhail D. Lukin; Immanuel Bloch

Quantum mechanical superexchange interactions form the basis of quantum magnetism in strongly correlated electronic media. We report on the direct measurement of superexchange interactions with ultracold atoms in optical lattices. After preparing a spin-mixture of ultracold atoms in an antiferromagnetically ordered state, we measured coherent superexchange-mediated spin dynamics with coupling energies from 5 hertz up to 1 kilohertz. By dynamically modifying the potential bias between neighboring lattice sites, the magnitude and sign of the superexchange interaction can be controlled, thus allowing the system to be switched between antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic spin interactions. We compare our findings to predictions of a two-site Bose-Hubbard model and find very good agreement, but are also able to identify corrections that can be explained by the inclusion of direct nearest-neighbor interactions.


Nature | 2007

Direct observation of second-order atom tunnelling

Simon Fölling; Stefan Trotzky; Patrick Cheinet; Michael Feld; Robert Saers; Artur Widera; Torben Müller; Immanuel Bloch

Tunnelling of material particles through a classically impenetrable barrier constitutes one of the hallmark effects of quantum physics. When interactions between the particles compete with their mobility through a tunnel junction, intriguing dynamical behaviour can arise because the particles do not tunnel independently. In single-electron or Bloch transistors, for example, the tunnelling of an electron or Cooper pair can be enabled or suppressed by the presence of a second charge carrier due to Coulomb blockade. Here we report direct, time-resolved observations of the correlated tunnelling of two interacting ultracold atoms through a barrier in a double-well potential. For the regime in which the interactions between the atoms are weak and tunnel coupling dominates, individual atoms can tunnel independently, similar to the case of a normal Josephson junction. However, when strong repulsive interactions are present, two atoms located on one side of the barrier cannot separate, but are observed to tunnel together as a pair in a second-order co-tunnelling process. By recording both the atom position and phase coherence over time, we fully characterize the tunnelling process for a single atom as well as the correlated dynamics of a pair of atoms for weak and strong interactions. In addition, we identify a conditional tunnelling regime in which a single atom can only tunnel in the presence of a second particle, acting as a single atom switch. Such second-order tunnelling events, which are the dominating dynamical effect in the strongly interacting regime, have not been previously observed with ultracold atoms. Similar second-order processes form the basis of superexchange interactions between atoms on neighbouring lattice sites of a periodic potential, a central component of proposals for realizing quantum magnetism.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Counting Atoms Using Interaction Blockade in an Optical Superlattice

Patrick Cheinet; Stefan Trotzky; M. Feld; U. Schnorrberger; M. Moreno-Cardoner; Simon Fölling; Immanuel Bloch

We report on the observation of an interaction blockade effect for ultracold atoms in optical lattices, analogous to the Coulomb blockade observed in mesoscopic solid state systems. When the lattice sites are converted into biased double wells, we detect a discrete set of steps in the well population for increasing bias potentials. These correspond to tunneling resonances where the atom number on each side of the barrier changes one by one. This allows us to count and control the number of atoms within a given well. By evaluating the amplitude of the different plateaus, we can fully determine the number distribution of the atoms in the lattice, which we demonstrate for the case of a superfluid and Mott insulating regime of 87Rb.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Quantum Spin Dynamics of Mode-Squeezed Luttinger Liquids in Two-Component Atomic Gases

Artur Widera; Stefan Trotsky; Patrick Cheinet; Simon Fölling; Fabrice Gerbier; Immanuel Bloch; Vladimir Gritsev; Mikhail D. Lukin; Eugene Demler

We report on the observation of many-body spin dynamics of interacting, one-dimensional (1D) ultracold bosonic gases with two spin states. By controlling the nonlinear atomic interactions close to a Feshbach resonance we are able to induce a phase diffusive many-body spin dynamics of the relative phase between the two components. We monitor this dynamical evolution by Ramsey interferometry, supplemented by a novel, many-body echo technique, which unveils the role of quantum fluctuations in 1D. We find that the time evolution of the system is well described by a Luttinger liquid initially prepared in a multimode squeezed state. Our approach allows us to probe the nonequilibrium evolution of one-dimensional many-body quantum systems.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Controlling and detecting spin correlations of ultracold atoms in optical lattices.

Stefan Trotzky; Yu-Ao Chen; Ute Schnorrberger; Patrick Cheinet; Immanuel Bloch

We report on the controlled creation of a valence bond state of delocalized effective-spin singlet and triplet dimers by means of a bichromatic optical superlattice. We demonstrate a coherent coupling between the singlet and triplet states and show how the superlattice can be employed to measure the singlet-fraction employing a spin-blockade effect. Our method provides a reliable way to detect and control nearest-neighbor spin correlations in many-body systems of ultracold atoms. Being able to measure these correlations is an important ingredient in studying quantum magnetism in optical lattices. We furthermore employ a SWAP operation between atoms which are part of different triplets, thus effectively increasing their bond-length. Such a SWAP operation provides an important step towards the massively parallel creation of a multiparticle entangled state in the lattice.


IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement | 2008

Measurement of the Sensitivity Function in a Time-Domain Atomic Interferometer

Patrick Cheinet; B. Canuel; F. Pereira Dos Santos; A. Gauguet; F. Yver-Leduc; Arnaud Landragin


Physical Review A | 2016

Quasiforbidden two-body Förster resonances in a cold Cs Rydberg gas

Bruno Pelle; Riccardo Faoro; Juliette Billy; Ennio Arimondo; Pierre Pillet; Patrick Cheinet


Physical Review A | 2018

Coherent scattering of near-resonant light by a dense, microscopic cloud of cold two-level atoms: Experiment versus theory

Stephan Jennewein; Ludovic Brossard; Y. Sortais; Antoine Browaeys; Patrick Cheinet; J. Robert; Pierre Pillet


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2011

Multi-grid experimental apparatus for the study of ultracold Rydberg-Rydberg interaction

Joshua Gurian; Paul Huillery; Yoann Bruneau; Patrick Cheinet; A. Fioretti; D. Comparat; Pierre Pillet


Advanced Workshop on Non-Standard Superfluids and Insulators | 2011

3D Localization of an expanding BEC in laser speckle potential

Vincent Josse; Alain Aspect; Alain Bernard; Philippe Bouyer; Patrick Cheinet; Fred Jendrzejewski; Kilian Müller; Luca Pezzè; Marie Piraud; Laurent Sanchez-Palencia

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Alain Aspect

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Philippe Bouyer

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Pierre Lugan

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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