Maria Goeppert Mayer Award Winner: New frontiers in quantum simulation enabled by precision laser spectroscopy

COFFEE_KLATCH · Invited

Abstract

Ultracold atomic systems have been proposed as ideal quantum simulators of real materials. Major breakthroughs have been achieved using neutral alkali atoms (one-outer-electron atoms) but their inherent ``simplicity'' introduces important limitations on the physics that can be investigated with them. Systems with more complex interactions and with richer internal structure offer an excellent platform for the exploration of a wider range of many-body phenomena. I will discuss our recent progress on the use of polar molecules, alkaline earth atoms --currently the basis of the most precise atomic clock in the world--, and trapped ions, as quantum simulators of iconic condensed matter Hamiltonians as well as Hamiltonians without solid state analogs. A promising direction under current exploration is the many-body physics that emerges at warmer temperatures (above quantum degeneracy) when there is a decoupling between motional and internal degrees of freedom. Even though in this regime the interaction energy scales can be small ($\sim$ Hz), they can be resolved thanks to the unprecedented level of control offered by modern precision laser spectroscopy.

Authors

  • Ana M. Rey

    JILA, NIST and University of Colorado at Boulder