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Dive into the research topics where Philipp Treutlein is active.

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Featured researches published by Philipp Treutlein.


Physical Review Letters | 2004

Bright Bose-Einstein Gap Solitons of Atoms with Repulsive Interaction

B. Eiermann; Th. Anker; M. Albiez; M. Taglieber; Philipp Treutlein; Karl-Peter Marzlin; M. K. Oberthaler

We report on the first experimental observation of bright matter wave solitons for 87Rb atoms with repulsive atom-atom interaction. This counterintuitive situation arises inside a weak periodic potential, where anomalous dispersion can be realized at the Brillouin zone boundary. If the coherent atomic wave packet is prepared at the corresponding band edge, a bright soliton is formed inside the gap. The strength of our system is the precise control of preparation and real time manipulation, allowing the systematic investigation of gap solitons.


Nature | 2010

Atom-chip-based generation of entanglement for quantum metrology.

Max F. Riedel; Pascal Böhi; Yun Li; T. W. Hänsch; Alice Sinatra; Philipp Treutlein

Atom chips provide a versatile quantum laboratory for experiments with ultracold atomic gases. They have been used in diverse experiments involving low-dimensional quantum gases, cavity quantum electrodynamics, atom–surface interactions, and chip-based atomic clocks and interferometers. However, a severe limitation of atom chips is that techniques to control atomic interactions and to generate entanglement have not been experimentally available so far. Such techniques enable chip-based studies of entangled many-body systems and are a key prerequisite for atom chip applications in quantum simulations, quantum information processing and quantum metrology. Here we report the experimental generation of multi-particle entanglement on an atom chip by controlling elastic collisional interactions with a state-dependent potential. We use this technique to generate spin-squeezed states of a two-component Bose–Einstein condensate; such states are a useful resource for quantum metrology. The observed reduction in spin noise of -3.7 ± 0.4 dB, combined with the spin coherence, implies four-partite entanglement between the condensate atoms; this could be used to improve an interferometric measurement by -2.5 ± 0.6 dB over the standard quantum limit. Our data show good agreement with a dynamical multi-mode simulation and allow us to reconstruct the Wigner function of the spin-squeezed condensate. The techniques reported here could be directly applied to chip-based atomic clocks, currently under development.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Bose-Einstein Condensate Coupled to a Nanomechanical Resonator on an Atom Chip

Philipp Treutlein; David Hunger; Stephan Camerer; T. W. Hänsch; Jakob Reichel

We theoretically study the coupling of Bose-Einstein condensed atoms to the mechanical oscillations of a nanoscale cantilever with a magnetic tip. This is an experimentally viable hybrid quantum system which allows one to explore the interface of quantum optics and condensed matter physics. We propose an experiment where easily detectable atomic spin flips are induced by the cantilever motion. This can be used to probe thermal oscillations of the cantilever with the atoms. At low cantilever temperatures, as realized in recent experiments, the backaction of the atoms onto the cantilever is significant and the system represents a mechanical analog of cavity quantum electrodynamics. With high but realistic cantilever quality factors, the strong coupling regime can be reached, either with single atoms or collectively with Bose-Einstein condensates. We discuss an implementation on an atom chip.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Strong Coupling of a Mechanical Oscillator and a Single Atom

Klemens Hammerer; Margareta Wallquist; Claudiu Genes; Max Ludwig; Florian Marquardt; Philipp Treutlein; P. Zoller; J. Ye; H. J. Kimble

We propose and analyze a setup to achieve strong coupling between a single trapped atom and a mechanical oscillator. The interaction between the motion of the atom and the mechanical oscillator is mediated by a quantized light field in a laser driven high-finesse cavity. In particular, we show that high fidelity transfer of quantum states between the atom and the mechanical oscillator is in reach for existing or near future experimental parameters. Our setup provides the basic toolbox from atomic physics for coherent manipulation, preparation, and measurement of micromechanical and nanomechanical oscillators.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Resonant Coupling of a Bose-Einstein Condensate to a Micromechanical Oscillator

David Hunger; Stephan Camerer; T. W. Hänsch; Daniel König; J. P. Kotthaus; Jakob Reichel; Philipp Treutlein

We report experiments in which the vibrations of a micromechanical oscillator are coupled to the motion of Bose-condensed atoms in a trap. The interaction relies on surface forces experienced by the atoms at about 1 microm distance from the mechanical structure. We observe resonant coupling to several well-resolved mechanical modes of the condensate. Coupling via surface forces does not require magnets, electrodes, or mirrors on the oscillator and could thus be employed to couple atoms to molecular-scale oscillators such as carbon nanotubes.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Realization of an Optomechanical Interface Between Ultracold Atoms and a Membrane

Stephan Camerer; Maria Korppi; Andreas Jöckel; David Hunger; T. W. Hänsch; Philipp Treutlein

We have realized a hybrid optomechanical system by coupling ultracold atoms to a micromechanical membrane. The atoms are trapped in an optical lattice, which is formed by retroreflection of a laser beam from the membrane surface. In this setup, the lattice laser light mediates an optomechanical coupling between membrane vibrations and atomic center-of-mass motion. We observe both the effect of the membrane vibrations onto the atoms as well as the backaction of the atomic motion onto the membrane. By coupling the membrane to laser-cooled atoms, we engineer the dissipation rate of the membrane. Our observations agree quantitatively with a simple model.


Physical Review Letters | 2003

Dispersion management for atomic matter waves.

B. Eiermann; Philipp Treutlein; Th. Anker; M. Albiez; M. Taglieber; Karl-Peter Marzlin; M. K. Oberthaler

We demonstrate the control of the dispersion of matter wave packets utilizing periodic potentials. This is analogous to the technique of dispersion management known in photon optics. Matter wave packets are realized by Bose-Einstein condensates of 87Rb in an optical dipole potential acting as a one-dimensional waveguide. A weak optical lattice is used to control the dispersion relation of the matter waves during the propagation of the wave packets. The dynamics are observed in position space and interpreted using the concept of effective mass. By switching from positive to negative effective mass, the dynamics can be reversed. The breakdown of the approximation of constant, as well as experimental signatures of an infinite effective mass are studied.


Physical Review A | 2006

Microwave potentials and optimal control for robust quantum gates on an atom chip

Philipp Treutlein; T. W. Hänsch; Jakob Reichel; Antonio Negretti; Markus A. Cirone; Tommaso Calarco

We propose a two-qubit collisional phase gate that can be implemented with available atom chip technology and present a detailed theoretical analysis of its performance. The gate is based on earlier phase gate schemes, but uses a qubit state pair with an experimentally demonstrated, very long coherence lifetime. Microwave near fields play a key role in our implementation as a means to realize the state-dependent potentials required for conditional dynamics. Quantum control algorithms are used to optimize gate performance. We employ circuit configurations that can be built with current fabrication processes and extensively discuss the impact of technical noise and imperfections that characterize an actual atom chip. We find an overall infidelity compatible with requirements for fault-tolerant quantum computation.


Protein Science | 2006

Quantum information processing in optical lattices and magnetic microtraps

Philipp Treutlein; Tilo Steinmetz; Yves Colombe; Benjamin Lev; Peter Hommelhoff; Jakob Reichel; Markus Greiner; Olaf Mandel; Arthur Widera; Tim Rom; Immanuel Bloch; T. W. Hänsch

PACS 03.67.Lx, 32.80.Pj, 03.75.Lm, 42.50.Pq We review our experiments on quantum information processing with neutral atoms in optical lattices and magnetic microtraps. Atoms in an optical lattice in the Mott insulator regime serve as a large qubit register. A spin-dependent lattice is used to split and delocalize the atomic wave functions in a controlled and coherent way over a defined number of lattice sites. This is used to experimentally demonstrate a massively parallel quantum gate array, which allows the creation of a highly entangled many-body cluster state through coherent collisions between atoms on neighbouring lattice sites. In magnetic microtraps on an atom chip, we demonstrate coherent manipulation of atomic qubit states and measure coherence lifetimes exceeding one second at micron-distance from the chip surface. We show that microwave near-fields on the chip can be used to create state-dependent potentials for the implementation of a quantum controlled phase gate with these robust qubit states. For single atom detection and preparation, we have developed high finesse fiber Fabry-Perot cavities and integrated them on the atom chip. We present an experiment in which we detected a very small number of cold atoms magnetically trapped in the cavity using the atom chip.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Quantum Metrology with a Scanning Probe Atom Interferometer

Caspar F. Ockeloen; Roman Schmied; Max F. Riedel; Philipp Treutlein

We use a small Bose-Einstein condensate on an atom chip as an interferometric scanning probe to map out a microwave field near the chip surface with a few micrometers resolution. With the use of entanglement between the atoms, our interferometer overcomes the standard quantum limit of interferometry by 4 dB and maintains enhanced performance for interrogation times up to 10 ms. This corresponds to a microwave magnetic field sensitivity of 77 pT/√Hz in a probe volume of 20 μm(3). Quantum metrology with entangled atoms is useful in measurements with high spatial resolution, since the atom number in the probe volume is limited by collisional loss. High-resolution measurements of microwave near fields, as demonstrated here, are important for the development of integrated microwave circuits for quantum information processing and applications in communication technology.

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Matthew T. Rakher

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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