Romain Long
Max Planck Society
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Publication
Featured researches published by Romain Long.
Physical Review Letters | 2010
Roger Gehr; Jürgen Volz; Guilhem Dubois; Tilo Steinmetz; Yves Colombe; Benjamin Lev; Romain Long; Jérôme Estève; Jakob Reichel
We prepare and detect the hyperfine state of a single 87Rb atom coupled to a fiber-based high-finesse cavity on an atom chip. The atom is extracted from a Bose-Einstein condensate and trapped at the maximum of the cavity field, resulting in a reproducibly strong atom-cavity coupling. We use the cavity reflection and transmission signal to infer the atomic hyperfine state with a fidelity exceeding 99.92% in a readout time of 100 μs. The atom is still trapped after detection.
Physical Review Letters | 2010
K. Maussang; G. Edward Marti; Tobias M. Schneider; Philipp Treutlein; Yun Li; Alice Sinatra; Romain Long; Jérôme Estève; Jakob Reichel
We measure atom number statistics after splitting a gas of ultracold 87Rb atoms in a purely magnetic double-well potential created on an atom chip. Well below the critical temperature for Bose-Einstein condensation Tc, we observe reduced fluctuations down to -4.9 dB below the atom shot noise level. Fluctuations rise to more than +3.8 dB close to Tc, before reaching the shot noise level for higher temperatures. We use two-mode and classical field simulations to model these results. This allows us to confirm that the supershot noise fluctuations directly originate from quantum statistics.
Philosophical transactions - Royal Society. Mathematical, physical and engineering sciences | 2003
Romain Long; Tilo Steinmetz; Peter Hommelhoff; Wolfgang Hänsel; T. W. Hänsch; Jakob Reichel
Microchip traps provide a promising approach to quantum information processing and communication (QIPC) with neutral atoms: strong and complex potentials can be produced for acting on the qubit atoms, and the potentials can be scaled to higher qubit numbers by virtue of the microfabrication process. We describe experimental results that are relevant to use in QIPC, such as the transport of Bose–Einstein–condensed atomic ensembles along the chip surface with the help of a magnetic conveyor belt. The second part of the paper is devoted to single–atom detection on the chip.
Applied Physics Letters | 2013
Sébastien Garcia; Dominik Maxein; Leander Hohmann; Jakob Reichel; Romain Long
We demonstrate a miniature, fiber-coupled optical tweezer to trap a single atom. The same fiber is used to trap a single atom and to read out its fluorescence. To obtain a low background level, the tweezer light is chopped, and we measure the influence of the chopping frequency on the atoms lifetime. We use the single atom as a single-photon source at 780 nm and measure the second-order correlation function of the emitted photons. Because of its miniature, robust, fiber-pigtailed design, this tweezer can be implemented in a broad range of experiments where single atoms are used as a resource.
European Physical Journal D | 2005
Romain Long; Tim Rom; Wolfgang Hänsel; T. W. Hänsch; Jakob Reichel
Physical Review A | 2018
Sébastien Garcia; Jakob Reichel; Romain Long
Optics Express | 2018
Sébastien Garcia; Francesco Ferri; Konstantin Ott; Jakob Reichel; Romain Long
Quantum Information and Measurement (QIM) 2017 | 2017
Francesco Ferri; Arthur La Rooij; Mohamed Baghdad; Jakob Reichel; Romain Long
Archive | 2017
Sébastien Garcia; Jakob Reichel; Romain Long
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Torben Popplau; Konstantin Ott; S '{e}bastien Garcia; Francesco Ferri; Ralf Kohlhaas; Klemens Sch "{u}ppert; Romain Long; Jakob Reichel