Vincent Josse
Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University
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Featured researches published by Vincent Josse.
Nature | 2008
Juliette Billy; Vincent Josse; Zhanchun Zuo; Alain Bernard; Ben Hambrecht; Pierre Lugan; David Clément; Laurent Sanchez-Palencia; Philippe Bouyer; Alain Aspect
In 1958, Anderson predicted the localization of electronic wavefunctions in disordered crystals and the resulting absence of diffusion. It is now recognized that Anderson localization is ubiquitous in wave physics because it originates from the interference between multiple scattering paths. Experimentally, localization has been reported for light waves, microwaves, sound waves and electron gases. However, there has been no direct observation of exponential spatial localization of matter waves of any type. Here we observe exponential localization of a Bose–Einstein condensate released into a one-dimensional waveguide in the presence of a controlled disorder created by laser speckle. We operate in a regime of pure Anderson localization, that is, with weak disorder—such that localization results from many quantum reflections of low amplitude—and an atomic density low enough to render interactions negligible. We directly image the atomic density profiles as a function of time, and find that weak disorder can stop the expansion and lead to the formation of a stationary, exponentially localized wavefunction—a direct signature of Anderson localization. We extract the localization length by fitting the exponential wings of the profiles, and compare it to theoretical calculations. The power spectrum of the one-dimensional speckle potentials has a high spatial frequency cutoff, causing exponential localization to occur only when the de Broglie wavelengths of the atoms in the expanding condensate are greater than an effective mobility edge corresponding to that cutoff. In the opposite case, we find that the density profiles decay algebraically, as predicted in ref. 13. The method presented here can be extended to localization of atomic quantum gases in higher dimensions, and with controlled interactions.
Physical Review Letters | 2004
Vincent Josse; Aurelien Dantan; A. Bramati; M. Pinard; E. Giacobino
We present an experimental demonstration of both quadrature and polarization entanglement generated via the interaction between a coherent linearly polarized field and cold atoms in a high finesse optical cavity. The nonlinear atom-field interaction produces two squeezed modes with orthogonal polarizations which are used to generate a pair of nonseparable beams, the entanglement of which is demonstrated by checking the inseparability criterion for continuous variables recently derived by Duan et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 2722 (2000)]] and calculating the entanglement of formation [Phys. Rev. Lett. 91, 107901 (2003)]].
Physical Review Letters | 2006
William Guerin; Jean-Felix Riou; John Gaebler; Vincent Josse; Philippe Bouyer; Alain Aspect
We report the first realization of a guided quasicontinuous atom laser by rf outcoupling a Bose-Einstein condensate from a hybrid optomagnetic trap into a horizontal atomic waveguide. This configuration allows us to cancel the acceleration due to gravity and keep the de Broglie wavelength constant at 0.5 microm during 0.1 s of propagation. We also show that our configuration, equivalent to pigtailing an optical fiber to a (photon) semiconductor laser, ensures an intrinsically good transverse mode matching.
Physical Review Letters | 2005
Ulrik L. Andersen; Vincent Josse; Gerd Leuchs
A scheme for optimal Gaussian cloning of optical coherent states is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. Its optical realization is based entirely on simple linear optical elements and homodyne detection. The optimality of the presented scheme is only limited by detection inefficiencies. Experimentally we achieved a cloning fidelity of about 65%, which almost touches the optimal value of 2/3.
Physical Review Letters | 2003
Vincent Josse; Aurelien Dantan; L. Vernac; A. Bramati; M. Pinard; E. Giacobino
We study the interaction of a nearly resonant linearly polarized laser beam with a cloud of cold cesium atoms in a high finesse optical cavity. We show theoretically and experimentally that the cross-Kerr effect due to the saturation of the optical transition produces quadrature squeezing on both the mean field and the orthogonally polarized vacuum mode. An interpretation of this vacuum squeezing as polarization squeezing is given and a method for measuring quantum Stokes parameters for weak beams via a local oscillator is developed.
Physical Review Letters | 2006
Jean-Felix Riou; William Guerin; Y. Le Coq; M. Fauquembergue; Vincent Josse; Philippe Bouyer; Alain Aspect
We study the propagation of a noninteracting atom laser distorted by the strong lensing effect of the Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) from which it is outcoupled. We observe a transverse structure containing caustics that vary with the density within the residing BEC. Using the WKB approximation, Fresnel-Kirchhoff integral formalism, and ABCD matrices, we are able to describe analytically the atom-laser propagation. This allows us to characterize the quality of the nonideal atom-laser beam by a generalized M2 factor defined in analogy to photon lasers. Finally we measure this quality factor for different lensing effects.
Optics Letters | 2005
Joel Heersink; Vincent Josse; Gerd Leuchs; Ulrik L. Andersen
A novel scheme to generate continuous variable polarization squeezing, using intense, femtosecond pulsed laser beams at 1500 nm in a single pass through a polarization maintaining fiber is reported in the paper. The system generates directly measurable polarization squeezing without the need for auxiliary resources and is thus in principle limited only by the systems linear losses. The experimental setup also allows for the direct measurement of the squeezing angle.
Physical Review Letters | 2006
Joel F. Corney; P. D. Drummond; Joel Heersink; Vincent Josse; Gerd Leuchs; Ulrik L. Andersen
We report new experiments that test quantum dynamical predictions of polarization squeezing for ultrashort photonic pulses in a birefringent fiber, including all relevant dissipative effects. This exponentially complex many-body problem is solved by means of a stochastic phase-space method. The squeezing is calculated and compared to experimental data, resulting in excellent quantitative agreement. From the simulations, we identify the physical limits to quantum noise reduction in optical fibers. The research represents a significant experimental test of first-principles time-domain quantum dynamics in a one-dimensional interacting Bose gas coupled to dissipative reservoirs.
Physical Review A | 2001
G. Delannoy; S. G. Murdoch; Vincent Boyer; Vincent Josse; Philippe Bouyer; Alain Aspect
We show, both experimentally and theoretically, that sympathetic cooling of
IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics | 2001
J.-P. Hermier; A. Bramati; A. Z. Khoury; Vincent Josse; E. Giacobino; P. Schnitzer; Rainer Michalzik; Karl Joachim Ebeling
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