Creating the first Bose-Einstein Condensate in Space

ORAL

Abstract

On 23$^{\mathrm{rd}}$ of January 2017 the first Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC) in Space was created onboard the sounding rocket mission MAIUS-1. The successful launch marks a major advancement in the effort of performing matter wave interferometry with BECs on space vehicles. Its high BEC-flux enables more than 100 experiments during flight, characterizing the creation of BECs in space, their free evolution, state preparation, and the creation of cold atoms in highly dynamic environments. MAIUS-1 opens a new path towards space borne inertial sensing employing interferometers with high accuracy and sensitivity. Two follow-up missions will investigate dual-species interferometry. Recently several missions were proposed ranging from tests of the universality of free fall to gravimetry. Due to their small initial size and low expansion rates BECs are the ideal source for such an interferometric measurement. The findings of the mission will contribute to the NASA CAL project and BECCAL (NASA and DLR). DLR under grant 50WP1435

Authors

  • M. Lachmann

    LU Hannover

  • S. Seidel

    LU Hannover

  • D. Becker

    LU Hannover

  • H. Ahlers

    LU Hannover

  • T. Wendrich

    LU Hannover

  • J. Grosse

    ZARM, Bremen

  • H. Müntinga

    ZARM, Bremen

  • B. Weps

    DLR-SC

  • A. Dinkelaker

    HUB Berlin

  • V. Schkolnik

    HUB Berlin

  • O. Hellmig

    U Hamburg

  • A. Wenzlawski

    JGU Mainz

  • W. Herr

    LU Hannover

  • N. Gaaloul

    LU Hannover

  • E. Rasel

    Leibnitz Universitat, Institut f\"ur Quantenoptik, Leibniz Universit\"at Hannover, LU Hannover

  • W. Ertmer

    Institut f\"ur Quantenoptik, Leibniz Universit\"at Hannover, LU Hannover