Measuring individual gap closings in a Floquet-Creutz ladder
ORAL
Abstract
Ultracold atoms in optical lattices serve as a formidable platform to study the physics of interacting quantum particles in lattices. The interplay between strong interactions and the geometry, dimensionality and topology of the bandstructure promises the exploration of phenomena ranging from frustrated magnetism to fractional Chern insulators. In particular, Floquet band engineering has been used to create topological band structures.
Strong phase modulation of a lattice potential hybridizes ground and excited bands and enables dynamic control over the topology of the coupled bands. For single-frequency modulation, these couplings appear symmetrically in quasi-momentum. Adding higher harmonic components to the drive breaks time-reversal symmetry and, therefore, individual bandgaps can be controlled. We probe experimentally the Floquet bandstructure of a driven one dimensional optical lattice and demonstrate the closing of individual gaps. In previous work this scheme has been used to engineer a Creutz ladder model. The individual gap closing indicates a topological phase transition in this model.
Strong phase modulation of a lattice potential hybridizes ground and excited bands and enables dynamic control over the topology of the coupled bands. For single-frequency modulation, these couplings appear symmetrically in quasi-momentum. Adding higher harmonic components to the drive breaks time-reversal symmetry and, therefore, individual bandgaps can be controlled. We probe experimentally the Floquet bandstructure of a driven one dimensional optical lattice and demonstrate the closing of individual gaps. In previous work this scheme has been used to engineer a Creutz ladder model. The individual gap closing indicates a topological phase transition in this model.
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Presenters
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Kilian Sandholzer
ETH Zurich
Authors
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Kilian Sandholzer
ETH Zurich
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Joaquin Minguzzi
ETH Zurich
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Anne-Sophie Walter
ETH Zurich
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Zijie Zhu
ETH Zurich
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Konrad G Viebahn
ETH Zurich
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Tilman Esslinger
ETH Zurich, Institute for Quantum Electronics, ETH Zürich, Department of Physics, ETH Zurich, 8093 Zurich, Switzerland