Microsecond-scale imaging of individual ytterbium atoms
ORAL
Abstract
Detecting and manipulating individual atoms with high fidelity is crucial in state-of-the-art quantum simulators, processors and atomic clocks. In this talk I will present recent results from our Yb tweezer platform, aiming to engineer many-body fermionic systems with single-particle resolution. We load different ytterbium isotopes in a tweezer array from a narrow-line MOT operating in a five-beam configuration, so far demonstrated only for lanthanides. We image single atoms using a weakly-destructive fast imaging scheme based on alternated counterpropagating light pulses at 399 nm addressing the broad 1S0-1P1 Yb transition. We achieve single-atom detection fidelities and survival probabilities > 99.8% with few μs illumination time. We employ the same technique to detect single or multiple atoms in free space with high fidelity and a position spread of about 1 μm. By preparing and releasing multiply-filled traps, we demonstrate parity-projection-free detection both for short and long time-of-flights (TOFs). This allows to perform TOF thermometry of single- or few-atom ensembles and, in the near future, to measure fermionic and bosonic multi-particle correlations.
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Publication: O. Abdel Karim et al., Five-beam magneto-optical traps for ytterbium atom arrays, in preparation.
Presenters
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Alessandro Muzi Falconi
University of Trieste
Authors
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Alessandro Muzi Falconi
University of Trieste
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Riccardo Panza
University of Trieste and CNR-INO, Univesity of Trieste and CNR-INO
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Riccardo Forti
University of Trieste
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Sara Sbernadori
University of Trieste and CNR-INO
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Omar Abdel Karim
CNR-INO and University of Napoli Federico II
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Matteo Marinelli
University of Trieste
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Francesco Scazza
University of Trieste and CNR-INO