Selim Jochim
Max Planck Society
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Selim Jochim.
Physical Review Letters | 2004
M. Bartenstein; A. Altmeyer; S. Riedl; Selim Jochim; Cheng Chin; J. Hecker Denschlag; R. Grimm
We demonstrate a reversible conversion of a 6Li2 molecular Bose-Einstein condensate to a degenerate Fermi gas of atoms by adiabatically crossing a Feshbach resonance. By optical in situ imaging, we observe a smooth change of the cloud size in the crossover regime. On the Feshbach resonance, the ensemble is strongly interacting and the measured cloud size is 75(7)% of the one of a noninteracting zero-temperature Fermi gas. The high condensate fraction of more than 90% and the adiabatic crossover suggest our Fermi gas to be cold enough to form a superfluid.
Physical Review Letters | 2004
M. Bartenstein; A. Altmeyer; S. Riedl; Selim Jochim; Cheng Chin; J. Hecker Denschlag; R. Grimm
We study collective excitation modes of a fermionic gas of (6)Li atoms in the BEC-BCS crossover regime. While measurements of the axial compression mode in the cigar-shaped trap close to a Feshbach resonance confirm theoretical expectations, the radial compression mode shows surprising features. In the strongly interacting molecular BEC regime, we observe a negative frequency shift with increasing coupling strength. In the regime of a strongly interacting Fermi gas, an abrupt change in the collective excitation frequency occurs, which may be a signature for a transition from a superfluid to a collisionless phase.
Physical Review Letters | 2003
Selim Jochim; M. Bartenstein; A. Altmeyer; G. Hendl; Cheng Chin; J. Hecker Denschlag; R. Grimm
We report on the production of a pure sample of up to 3 x 10(5) optically trapped molecules from a Fermi gas of 6Li atoms. The dimers are formed by three-body recombination near a Feshbach resonance. For purification, a Stern-Gerlach selection technique is used that efficiently removes all trapped atoms from the atom-molecule mixture. The behavior of the purified molecular sample shows a striking dependence on the applied magnetic field. For very weakly bound molecules near the Feshbach resonance, the gas exhibits a remarkable stability with respect to collisional decay.
Science | 2011
F. Serwane; G. Zürn; Thomas Lompe; T. B. Ottenstein; A. N. Wenz; Selim Jochim
Optical traps are used to prepare up to 10 cold lithium atoms to be used for simulating few-body fermionic systems. Systems consisting of few interacting fermions are the building blocks of matter, with atoms and nuclei being the most prominent examples. We have created a few-body quantum system with complete control over its quantum state using ultracold fermionic atoms in an optical dipole trap. Ground-state systems consisting of 1 to 10 particles are prepared with fidelities of ∼90%. We can tune the interparticle interactions to arbitrary values using a Feshbach resonance and have observed the interaction-induced energy shift for a pair of repulsively interacting atoms. This work is expected to enable quantum simulation of strongly correlated few-body systems.
Physical Review Letters | 2005
M. Bartenstein; A. Altmeyer; S. Riedl; R. Geursen; Selim Jochim; Cheng Chin; J. Hecker Denschlag; R. Grimm; Andrea Simoni; Eite Tiesinga; Carl J. Williams; Paul S. Julienne
We employ radio-frequency spectroscopy on weakly bound (6)Li(2) molecules to precisely determine the molecular binding energies and the energy splittings between molecular states for different magnetic fields. These measurements allow us to extract the interaction parameters of ultracold (6)Li atoms based on a multichannel quantum scattering model. We determine the singlet and triplet scattering lengths to be a(s) = 45.167(8)a(0) and a(t) = -2140(18)a(0) (1a(0) = 0.052 917 7 nm), and the positions of the broad Feshbach resonances in the energetically lowest three s-wave scattering channels to be 83.41(15), 69.04(5), and 81.12(10) mT.
Physical Review Letters | 2008
Timo Bastian Ottenstein; Thomas Lompe; M. Kohnen; A. N. Wenz; Selim Jochim
We report on the creation of a degenerate Fermi gas consisting of a balanced mixture of atoms in three different hyperfine states of 6Li. This new system consists of three distinguishable fermions with different and tunable interparticle scattering lengths a_{12}, a_{13}, and a_{23}. We are able to prepare samples containing 5x10;{4} atoms in each state at a temperature of about 215 nK, which corresponds to T/T_{F} approximately 0.37. We investigated the collisional stability of the gas for magnetic fields between 0 and 600 G and found a prominent loss feature at 130 G. From lifetime measurements, we determined three-body loss coefficients, which vary over nearly 3 orders of magnitude.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
G. Zürn; Friedhelm Serwane; Thomas Lompe; A. N. Wenz; Martin Gerhard Ries; Johanna Elise Bohn; Selim Jochim
We study a system of two distinguishable fermions in a 1D harmonic potential. This system has the exceptional property that there is an analytic solution for arbitrary values of the interparticle interaction. We tune the interaction strength and compare the measured properties of the system to the theoretical prediction. For diverging interaction strength, the energy and square modulus of the wave function for two distinguishable particles are the same as for a system of two noninteracting identical fermions. This is referred to as fermionization. We have observed this phenomenon by directly comparing two distinguishable fermions with diverging interaction strength with two identical fermions in the same potential. We observe good agreement between experiment and theory. By adding more particles our system can be used as a quantum simulator for more complex systems where no theoretical solution is available.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
Simon Murmann; Andrea Bergschneider; Vincent M. Klinkhamer; G. Zürn; Thomas Lompe; Selim Jochim
We have prepared two ultracold fermionic atoms in an isolated double-well potential and obtained full control over the quantum state of this system. In particular, we can independently control the interaction strength between the particles, their tunneling rate between the wells and the tilt of the potential. By introducing repulsive (attractive) interparticle interactions we have realized the two-particle analog of a Mott-insulating (charge-density-wave) state. We have also spectroscopically observed how second-order tunneling affects the energy of the system. This work realizes the first step of a bottom-up approach to deterministically create a single-site addressable realization of a ground-state Fermi-Hubbard system.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
G. Zürn; Thomas Lompe; A. N. Wenz; Selim Jochim; Paul S. Julienne; Jeremy M. Hutson
We perform radio-frequency dissociation spectroscopy of weakly bound 6Li2 Feshbach molecules using low-density samples of about 30 molecules in an optical dipole trap. Combined with a high magnetic field stability, this allows us to resolve the discrete trap levels in the radio-frequency dissociation spectra. This novel technique allows the binding energy of Feshbach molecules to be determined with unprecedented precision. We use these measurements as an input for a fit to the 6Li scattering potential using coupled-channel calculations. From this new potential, we determine the pole positions of the broad 6Li Feshbach resonances with an accuracy better than 7×10(-4) of the resonance widths. This eliminates the dominant uncertainty for current precision measurements of the equation of state of strongly interacting Fermi gases. As an important consequence, our results imply a corrected value for the Bertsch parameter ξ measured by Ku et al. [Science 335, 563 (2012)], which is ξ=0.370(5)(8).
Science | 2010
Thomas Lompe; Timo Bastian Ottenstein; Friedhelm Serwane; A. N. Wenz; G. Zürn; Selim Jochim
Few-Body Problem Seemingly simple, quantum mechanical few-body systems are notoriously difficult to describe. Efimov trimers, three-body bound states with interactions tuned to be in close vicinity of the formation of two-body bound states, are the most tractable of these systems, with relevance, for example, in nuclear physics. Observed recently in ultracold atomic gases through their signatures in the rate of inelastic three-body collisions, Efimov trimers are predicted to appear at interaction strengths whose ratios are universally specified. By measuring binding energy as a function of interaction strength, Lompe et al. (p. 940) directly observed the association of three distinguishable atoms into a bound state. This technique may enable more precise studies of the trimer state, potentially revealing the nature of nonuniversal corrections suggested by prior experiments. A bound state of three fermionic atoms in different quantum states is formed directly by laser association. The quantum mechanical three-body problem is one of the fundamental challenges of few-body physics. When the two-body interactions become resonant, an infinite series of universal three-body bound states is predicted to occur, whose properties are determined by the strength of the two-body interactions. We used radio-frequency fields to associate Efimov trimers consisting of three distinguishable fermions. The measurements of their binding energy are consistent with theoretical predictions that include nonuniversal corrections.