Peter Maunz
Max Planck Society
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Publication
Featured researches published by Peter Maunz.
Nature | 2000
Pepijn Willemszoon Harry Pinkse; Thomas Fischer; Peter Maunz; Gerhard Rempe
The creation of a photon–atom bound state was first envisaged for the case of an atom in a long-lived excited state inside a high-quality microwave cavity. In practice, however, light forces in the microwave domain are insufficient to support an atom against gravity. Although optical photons can provide forces of the required magnitude, atomic decay rates and cavity losses are larger too, and so the atom–cavity system must be continually excited by an external laser. Such an approach also permits continuous observation of the atoms position, by monitoring the light transmitted through the cavity. The dual role of photons in this system distinguishes it from other single-atom experiments such as those using magneto-optical traps, ion traps or a far-off-resonance optical trap. Here we report high-finesse optical cavity experiments in which the change in transmission induced by a single slow atom approaching the cavity triggers an external feedback switch which traps the atom in a light field containing about one photon on average. The oscillatory motion of the trapped atom induces oscillations in the transmitted light intensity; we attribute periodic structure in intensity-correlation-function data to ‘long-distance’ flights of the atom between different anti-nodes of the standing-wave in the cavity. The system should facilitate investigations of the dynamics of single quantum objects and may find future applications in quantum information processing.
international quantum electronics conference | 2004
Peter Maunz; Thomas Puppe; Ingrid Schuster; Niels Syassen; Pepijn Willemszoon Harry Pinkse; Gerhard Rempe
All conventional methods to laser-cool atoms rely on repeated cycles of optical pumping and spontaneous emission of a photon by the atom. Spontaneous emission in a random direction provides the dissipative mechanism required to remove entropy from the atom. However, alternative cooling methods have been proposed for a single atom strongly coupled to a high-finesse cavity; the role of spontaneous emission is replaced by the escape of a photon from the cavity. Application of such cooling schemes would improve the performance of atom–cavity systems for quantum information processing. Furthermore, as cavity cooling does not rely on spontaneous emission, it can be applied to systems that cannot be laser-cooled by conventional methods; these include molecules (which do not have a closed transition) and collective excitations of Bose condensates, which are destroyed by randomly directed recoil kicks. Here we demonstrate cavity cooling of single rubidium atoms stored in an intracavity dipole trap. The cooling mechanism results in extended storage times and improved localization of atoms. We estimate that the observed cooling rate is at least five times larger than that produced by free-space cooling methods, for comparable excitation of the atom.
Physical Review Letters | 2005
Peter Maunz; Thomas Puppe; Ingrid Schuster; Niels Syassen; Pepijn Willemszoon Harry Pinkse; Gerhard Rempe
The energy-level structure of a single atom strongly coupled to the mode of a high-finesse optical cavity is investigated. The atom is stored in an intracavity dipole trap and cavity cooling is used to compensate for inevitable heating. Two well-resolved normal modes are observed both in the cavity transmission and the trap lifetime. The experiment is in good agreement with a Monte Carlo simulation, demonstrating our ability to localize the atom to within lambda/10 at a cavity antinode.
Physical Review Letters | 2002
Peter Horak; Helmut Ritsch; Thomas Fischer; Peter Maunz; Thomas Puppe; Pepijn Willemszoon Harry Pinkse; Gerhard Rempe
A new method to track the motion of a single particle in the field of a high-finesse optical resonator is analyzed. It exploits sets of near-degenerate higher-order Gaussian cavity modes, whose symmetry is broken by the position dependent phase shifts induced by the particle. Observation of the spatial intensity distribution outside the cavity allows direct determination of the particles position. This is demonstrated by numerically generating a realistic atomic trajectory using a semiclassical simulation and comparing it to the reconstructed path. The path reconstruction itself requires no knowledge about the forces on the particle. Experimental realization strategies are discussed.
Journal of Modern Optics | 2000
Pepijn Willemszoon Harry Pinkse; Thomas Fischer; Peter Maunz; Thomas Puppe; Gerhard Rempe
Abstract We report on trapping a single neutral atom in the standing-wave light field of a high-finesse optical cavity containing one photon on average, a single-photon optical trap, or SPOT for short. This trap has the novel feature that the light field is also used to observe the atom in real time. The oscillatory motion of the trapped atom induces well-resolved oscillations of the light intensity. Periodic structure is visible in the fourth-order intensity correlation function, attributed to long-distance flights of the atom along the standing wave. The finite duration of those flights provides evidence for cavity-mediated cooling of atoms. We discuss the various mechanisms determining the trapping time and compare the results with a quantum-jump Monte Carlo simulation to interpret the observed signals.
New Journal of Physics | 2001
Thomas Fischer; Peter Maunz; Thomas Puppe; Pepijn Willemszoon Harry Pinkse; GRempe
We solve the quantum Langevin equations of motion for N point-like two-level atoms moving in an externally pumped cavity field. In the limit of the low saturation of the atoms, we obtain analytical expressions for the dipole force, the velocity-dependent force and the momentum diffusion coefficient for each atom in the presence of other atoms. The expressions show that in general the forces on each atom depend on the position and the velocity of all the other atoms.
Nature Communications | 2017
Robin Blume-Kohout; John King Gamble; Erik Nielsen; Kenneth Rudinger; Jonathan Mizrahi; Kevin M. Fortier; Peter Maunz
Quantum information processors promise fast algorithms for problems inaccessible to classical computers. But since qubits are noisy and error-prone, they will depend on fault-tolerant quantum error correction (FTQEC) to compute reliably. Quantum error correction can protect against general noise if—and only if—the error in each physical qubit operation is smaller than a certain threshold. The threshold for general errors is quantified by their diamond norm. Until now, qubits have been assessed primarily by randomized benchmarking, which reports a different error rate that is not sensitive to all errors, and cannot be compared directly to diamond norm thresholds. Here we use gate set tomography to completely characterize operations on a trapped-Yb+-ion qubit and demonstrate with greater than 95% confidence that they satisfy a rigorous threshold for FTQEC (diamond norm ≤6.7 × 10−4).
Physical review applied | 2015
Daniel Lynn Stick; Boyan Tabakov; Francisco M. Benito; Matthew Glenn Blain; Craig Robert Clark; Susan M. Clark; Raymond A. Haltli; Peter Maunz; Jonathan David Sterk; Chris P. Tigges
We report on experiments with a microfabricated surface trap designed for trapping a chain of ions in a ring. Uniform ion separation over most of the ring is achieved with a rotationally symmetric design and by measuring and suppressing undesired electric fields. After minimizing these fields the ions are confined primarily by an rf trapping pseudo-potential and their mutual Coulomb repulsion. The ring-shaped crystal consists of approximately 400 Ca
Physical review applied | 2014
Craig Robert Clark; Chin-wen Chou; A. R. Ellis; Jeff Hunker; Shanalyn A. Kemme; Peter Maunz; Boyan Tabakov; Chris P. Tigges; Daniel Lynn Stick
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Optics Letters | 2003
Peter Maunz; Thomas Puppe; Thomas Fischer; Pepijn Willemszoon Harry Pinkse; Gerhard Rempe
ions with an estimated average separation of 9