Renate Landig
ETH Zurich
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Featured researches published by Renate Landig.
Nature | 2017
Soonwon Choi; Joonhee Choi; Renate Landig; Georg Kucsko; Hengyun Zhou; Junichi Isoya; Fedor Jelezko; Shinobu Onoda; Hitoshi Sumiya; Vedika Khemani; Curt von Keyserlingk; Norman Yao; Eugene Demler; Mikhail D. Lukin
Understanding quantum dynamics away from equilibrium is an outstanding challenge in the modern physical sciences. Out-of-equilibrium systems can display a rich variety of phenomena, including self-organized synchronization and dynamical phase transitions. More recently, advances in the controlled manipulation of isolated many-body systems have enabled detailed studies of non-equilibrium phases in strongly interacting quantum matter; for example, the interplay between periodic driving, disorder and strong interactions has been predicted to result in exotic ‘time-crystalline’ phases, in which a system exhibits temporal correlations at integer multiples of the fundamental driving period, breaking the discrete time-translational symmetry of the underlying drive. Here we report the experimental observation of such discrete time-crystalline order in a driven, disordered ensemble of about one million dipolar spin impurities in diamond at room temperature. We observe long-lived temporal correlations, experimentally identify the phase boundary and find that the temporal order is protected by strong interactions. This order is remarkably stable to perturbations, even in the presence of slow thermalization. Our work opens the door to exploring dynamical phases of matter and controlling interacting, disordered many-body systems.
Nature | 2016
Renate Landig; Lorenz Hruby; Nishant Dogra; Manuele Landini; Rafael Mottl; Tobias Donner; Tilman Esslinger
Insights into complex phenomena in quantum matter can be gained from simulation experiments with ultracold atoms, especially in cases where theoretical characterization is challenging. However, these experiments are mostly limited to short-range collisional interactions; recently observed perturbative effects of long-range interactions were too weak to reach new quantum phases. Here we experimentally realize a bosonic lattice model with competing short- and long-range interactions, and observe the appearance of four distinct quantum phases—a superfluid, a supersolid, a Mott insulator and a charge density wave. Our system is based on an atomic quantum gas trapped in an optical lattice inside a high-finesse optical cavity. The strength of the short-range on-site interactions is controlled by means of the optical lattice depth. The long (infinite)-range interaction potential is mediated by a vacuum mode of the cavity and is independently controlled by tuning the cavity resonance. When probing the phase transition between the Mott insulator and the charge density wave in real time, we observed a behaviour characteristic of a first-order phase transition. Our measurements have accessed a regime for quantum simulation of many-body systems where the physics is determined by the intricate competition between two different types of interactions and the zero point motion of the particles.
Science | 2012
Rafael Mottl; Ferdinand Brennecke; Kristian Baumann; Renate Landig; Tobias Donner; Tilman Esslinger
Cavity-Induced Minimum Tuning the strength and range of interactions in cold atomic gases is crucial to their role as quantum simulators. Most atom-atom interactions are short-ranged. One way to extend the range is to couple the gas to an optical cavity, which can propagate interactions between atoms, making the interactions effectively long-ranged. This system has been used to observe a transition to a “supersolid” phase characterized by a checkerboard atomic density order. Mottl et al. (p. 1570, published online 17 May) used Bragg spectroscopy to measure the excitation spectrum of an ultracold gas of Rb-87 atoms as the interaction strength was varied. Consistent with theoretical predictions, a minimum was observed in the excitation energy, similar to that observed in roton excitations of the superfluid helium. Low-energy excitations of the type present in superfluid helium are observed in a cold gas of rubidium atoms. Long-range interactions in quantum gases are predicted to give rise to an excitation spectrum of roton character, similar to that observed in superfluid helium. We investigated the excitation spectrum of a Bose-Einstein condensate with cavity-mediated long-range interactions, which couple all particles to each other. Increasing the strength of the interaction leads to a softening of an excitation mode at a finite momentum, preceding a superfluid-to-supersolid phase transition. We used a variant of Bragg spectroscopy to study the mode softening across the phase transition. The measured spectrum was in very good agreement with ab initio calculations and, at the phase transition, a diverging susceptibility was observed. The work paves the way toward quantum simulation of long-range interacting many-body systems.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Ferdinand Brennecke; Rafael Mottl; Kristian Baumann; Renate Landig; Tobias Donner; Tilman Esslinger
We experimentally study the influence of dissipation on the driven Dicke quantum phase transition, realized by coupling external degrees of freedom of a Bose–Einstein condensate to the light field of a high-finesse optical cavity. The cavity provides a natural dissipation channel, which gives rise to vacuum-induced fluctuations and allows us to observe density fluctuations of the gas in real-time. We monitor the divergence of these fluctuations over two orders of magnitude while approaching the phase transition, and observe a behavior that deviates significantly from that expected for a closed system. A correlation analysis of the fluctuations reveals the diverging time scale of the atomic dynamics and allows us to extract a damping rate for the external degree of freedom of the atoms. We find good agreement with our theoretical model including dissipation via both the cavity field and the atomic field. Using a dissipation channel to nondestructively gain information about a quantum many-body system provides a unique path to study the physics of driven-dissipative systems.
Nature Communications | 2015
Renate Landig; Ferdinand Brennecke; Rafael Mottl; Tobias H. Donner; Tilman Esslinger
The dynamic structure factor is a central quantity describing the physics of quantum many-body systems, capturing structure and collective excitations of a material. In condensed matter, it can be measured via inelastic neutron scattering, which is an energy-resolving probe for the density fluctuations. In ultracold atoms, a similar approach could so far not be applied because of the diluteness of the system. Here we report on a direct, real-time and nondestructive measurement of the dynamic structure factor of a quantum gas exhibiting cavity-mediated long-range interactions. The technique relies on inelastic scattering of photons, stimulated by the enhanced vacuum field inside a high finesse optical cavity. We extract the density fluctuations, their energy and lifetime while the system undergoes a structural phase transition. We observe an occupation of the relevant quasi-particle mode on the level of a few excitations, and provide a theoretical description of this dissipative quantum many-body system.
international quantum electronics conference | 2013
Tobias Donner; Ferdinand Brennecke; Rafael Mottl; Renate Landig; Kristian Baumann; Tilmann Esslinger
Creating quantum gases with long-range atom-atom interactions is a vibrant area of current research, possibly leading to the observation of novel quantum phases and phase transitions. In our approach, we couple the external degree of freedom of a Bose-Einstein condensate to the vacuum mode of a high-finesse optical cavity using a non-resonant standing-wave transverse pump beam. This gives rise to a driven-dissipative system with cavity-mediated atom-atom interactions of global range, which are tunable both in magnitude and sign.
Physical Review Letters | 2018
Georg Kucsko; Soonwon Choi; Joonhee Choi; Peter Maurer; Hengyun Zhou; Renate Landig; Hitoshi Sumiya; Shinobu Onoda; Junich Isoya; Fedor Jelezko; Eugene Demler; Norman Yao; Mikhail D. Lukin
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2018
Joonhee Choi; Hengyun Zhou; Soonwon Choi; Renate Landig; Wen Wei Ho; Junichi Isoya; Fedor Jelezko; Shinobu Onoda; Hitoshi Sumiya; Dmitry A. Abanin; Mikhail D. Lukin
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Elana Urbach; Tamara Sumarac; Igor Lovchinsky; Renate Landig; Javier Sanchez-Yamagishi; Trond Andersen; Hongkun Park; Mikhail D. Lukin
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Hengyun Zhou; Soonwon Choi; Joonhee Choi; Renate Landig; Georg Kucsko; Junichi Isoya; Fedor Jelezko; Shinobu Onoda; Hitoshi Sumiya; Vedika Khemani; Curt von Keyserlingk; Norman Yao; Eugene Demler; Mikhail D. Lukin