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Dive into the research topics where S. Knoop is active.

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Featured researches published by S. Knoop.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Evidence for universal four-body states tied to an Efimov trimer.

F. Ferlaino; S. Knoop; Martin Berninger; Walter Harm; J. P. D'Incao; Hanns-Christoph Nägerl; R. Grimm

We report on the measurement of four-body recombination rate coefficients in an atomic gas. Our results obtained with an ultracold sample of cesium atoms at negative scattering lengths show a resonant enhancement of losses and provide strong evidence for the existence of a pair of four-body states, which is strictly connected to Efimov trimers via universal relations. Our findings confirm recent theoretical predictions and demonstrate the enrichment of the Efimov scenario when a fourth particle is added to the generic three-body problem.


Nature Physics | 2009

Observation of an Efimov-like trimer resonance in ultracold atom–dimer scattering

S. Knoop; F. Ferlaino; M. Mark; Martin Berninger; H. Schöbel; Hanns-Christoph Nägerl; R. Grimm

The observation of a trimer resonance in an ultracold mixture of caesium atoms and dimers confirms one of the key predictions of three-body physics in the limit of resonant two-body interactions, with possible implications for understanding few-body states in nuclear matter.


Physical Review B | 2009

Feynman path-integral treatment of the BEC-impurity polaron

J. Tempere; W. Casteels; M. K. Oberthaler; S. Knoop; Eddy Timmermans; J. T. Devreese

The description of an impurity atom in a Bose-Einstein condensate can be cast in the form of Frohlichs polaron Hamiltonian, where the Bogoliubov excitations play the role of the phonons. An expression for the corresponding polaronic coupling strength is derived, relating the coupling strength to the scattering lengths, the trap size and the number of Bose condensed atoms. This allows to identify several approaches to reach the strong-coupling limit for the quantum gas po- larons, whereas this limit was hitherto experimentally inaccessible in solids. We apply Feynmans path-integral method to calculate for all coupling strengths the polaronic shift in the free energy and the increase in the effective mass. The effect of temperature on these quantities is included in the description. We find similarities to the acoustic polaron results and indications of a transition between free polarons and self-trapped polarons. The prospects, based on the current theory, of investigating the polaron physics with ultracold gases are discussed for lithium atoms in a sodium condensate.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Magnetically controlled exchange process in an ultracold atom-dimer mixture

S. Knoop; F. Ferlaino; Martin Berninger; M. Mark; Hanns-Christoph Nägerl; R. Grimm; J. P. D'Incao; B. D. Esry

We report on the observation of an elementary exchange process in an optically trapped ultracold sample of atoms and Feshbach molecules. We can magnetically control the energetic nature of the process and tune it from endoergic to exoergic, enabling the observation of a pronounced threshold behavior. In contrast to relaxation to more deeply bound molecular states, the exchange process does not lead to trap loss. We find excellent agreement between our experimental observations and calculations based on the solutions of three-body Schrödinger equation in the adiabatic hyperspherical representation. The high efficiency of the exchange process is explained by the halo character of both the initial and final molecular states.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Collisions between Tunable Halo Dimers : Exploring an Elementary Four-Body Process with Identical Bosons

F. Ferlaino; S. Knoop; M. Mark; Martin Berninger; H. Schöbel; Hanns-Christoph Nägerl; R. Grimm

We study inelastic collisions in a pure, trapped sample of Feshbach molecules made of bosonic cesium atoms in the quantum halo regime. We measure the relaxation rate coefficient for decay to lower-lying molecular states and study the dependence on scattering length and temperature. We identify a pronounced loss minimum with varying scattering length along with a further suppression of loss with decreasing temperature. Our observations provide insight into the physics of a few-body quantum system that consists of four identical bosons at large values of the two-body scattering length.


Physical Review A | 2012

Feshbach spectroscopy and scattering properties of ultracold Li+Na mixtures

T. Schuster; R. Scelle; A. Trautmann; S. Knoop; M. K. Oberthaler; Mm Maartje Haverhals; Maikel Goosen; Sjjmf Servaas Kokkelmans; E. Tiemann

We have observed 26 interspecies Feshbach resonances at fields up to 2050 G in ultracold 6 Li + 23 Na mixtures for different spin-state combinations. Applying the asymptotic bound-state model to assign the resonances, we found that most resonances have d-wave character. This analysis serves as guidance for a coupled-channel calculation, which uses modified interaction potentials to describe the positions of the Feshbach resonances well within the experimental uncertainty and to calculate their widths. The scattering length derived from the improved interaction potentials is experimentally confirmed and deviates from previously reported values in sign and magnitude. We give prospects for 7 Li + 23 Na and predict broad Feshbach resonances suitable for tuning.


Physical Review A | 2012

Universal three-body parameter in ultracold 4He*

S. Knoop; Js Borbely; W. Vassen; Sjjmf Servaas Kokkelmans

We have analyzed our recently measured three-body loss rate coefficient for a Bose-Einstein condensate of spin-polarized metastable triplet 4He atoms in terms of Efimov physics. The large value of the scattering length for these atoms, which provides access to the Efimov regime, arises from a nearby potential resonance. We find the loss coefficient to be consistent with the three-body parameter (3BP) found in alkali-metal experiments, where Feshbach resonances are used to tune the interaction. This provides evidence for a universal 3BP outside the group of alkali-metal elements. In addition, we give examples of other atomic systems without Feshbach resonances but with a large scattering length that would be interesting to analyze once precise measurements of three-body loss are available.


Physical Review A | 2011

Feshbach spectroscopy and analysis of the interaction potentials of ultracold sodium

S. Knoop; T. Schuster; R. Scelle; A. Trautmann; J. Appmeier; M. K. Oberthaler; Eite Tiesinga; E. Tiemann

We have studied magnetic Feshbach resonances in an ultracold sample of Na prepared in the absolute hyperfine ground state. We report on the observation of three s-, eight d-, and three g-wave Feshbach resonances, including a more precise determination of two known s-wave resonances, and one s-wave resonance at a magnetic field exceeding 200 mT. Using a coupled-channels calculation we have improved the sodium ground-state potentials by taking into account these new experimental data and derived values for the scattering lengths. In addition, a description of the molecular states leading to the Feshbach resonances in terms of the asymptotic-bound-state model is presented.


Journal of Physics B | 2005

Inner- and outer-shell electron dynamics in proton collisions with sodium atoms

M. Zapukhlyak; Tom Kirchner; H J Ludde; S. Knoop; R Morgenstern; Ronnie Hoekstra

p+Na collisions have been investigated theoretically and experimentally at impact energies in the keV regime. We present results for capture and ionization processes, and, in particular, analyse the role of initial inner-shell electrons, whose active participation is identified in the experiments through the analysis of recoil-ion momentum spectra. Quantum-mechanical calculations within the independent particle model have been carried out for all active electrons. A very good overall agreement between the theoretical and experimental results is found. The calculations support the observation that capture from inner shells is an important reaction channel even at relatively low impact energies, and dominates total capture above 40 keV.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Metastable Feshbach Molecules in High Rotational States

S. Knoop; M. Mark; F. Ferlaino; Johann G. Danzl; T. Kraemer; Hanns-Christoph Nägerl; R. Grimm

We experimentally demonstrate Cs2 Feshbach molecules well above the dissociation threshold, which are stable against spontaneous decay on the time scale of 1 s. An optically trapped sample of ultracold dimers is prepared in a high rotational state and magnetically tuned into a region with a negative binding energy. The metastable character of these molecules arises from the large centrifugal barrier in combination with negligible coupling to states with low rotational angular momentum. A sharp onset of dissociation with increasing magnetic field is mediated by a crossing with a lower rotational dimer state and facilitates dissociation on demand with a well-defined energy.

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F. Ferlaino

University of Florence

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R. Grimm

University of Innsbruck

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W. Vassen

VU University Amsterdam

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M. Mark

University of Innsbruck

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V. G. Hasan

University of Groningen

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