Quantum Matter Synthesizer: Seeing and arranging individual atoms in an optical lattice
ORAL
Abstract
The capability to detect and rearrange individual atoms in a quantum gas promises a new research frontier to synthesize generic quantum matter and realize universal quantum simulation of many-body physics. Toward this goal, we present the construction and characterization of a new platform called Quantum Matter Synthesizer (QMS), where we integrate quantum gas microscopy of atoms in a two-dimensional lattice with an optical tweezer array generated by Digital Micromirror Devices (DMD). We demonstrate site-resolved imaging with a diffraction-limited resolution of 630 nm. We also develop fast computation algorithm to perform real-time control of the DMD optical potential at >2kHz, which will form moving optical tweezers to re-arrange atoms in the triangular lattice. The technical implementation and prospective research topics will be detailed in this talk.
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Presenters
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Mingjiamei Zhang
University of Chicago
Authors
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Mingjiamei Zhang
University of Chicago
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Jonathan Trisnadi
University of Chicago
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Lauren Weiss
University of Chicago
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Samir Rajani
University of Chicago
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Cheng Chin
James Franck Institute, Enrico Fermi Institute, Department of Physics, University of Chicago, University of Chicago, Chicago, James Franck Institute, Enrico Fermi Institute, Department of Physics University of Chicago