Synopsis

Quantum Ratchet Made Using an Optical Lattice

Physics 16, s140
Researchers have turned an optical lattice into a ratchet that moves atoms from one site to the next. 
tycoon101/stock.abobe.com

A ratchet is a device that produces a net forward motion of an object from a periodic (or random) driving force. Although ratchets are common in watches and in cells (see Focus: Stalling a Molecular Motor), they are hard to make for quantum systems. Now researchers demonstrate a quantum ratchet for a collection of cold atoms trapped in an optical lattice [1]. By varying the lattice’s light fields in a time-dependent way, the researchers show that they can move the atoms coherently from one lattice site to the next without disturbing the atoms’ quantum states.

One type of ratchet (a Hamiltonian ratchet) works by providing periodic, nonlossy pushes to a gas or other multiparticle system. For particles starting in certain initial states, the pushes are timed with their motion, and the resulting movement is in a particular forward direction. For particles in other states, the pushes are out of sync, and the particles travel in chaotic trajectories with no preferred direction.

Hamiltonian ratchets have previously been demonstrated for quantum systems, but for those ratchets the particles ended up spread out in space. The ratchet designed by David Guéry-Odelin from the University of Toulouse, France, and his colleagues has tighter directional control. For the demonstration, the researchers placed 105 rubidium atoms in the periodic potential of an optical lattice. Applying specially tuned modulations to this potential, they showed that the atoms moved in discrete steps from one lattice site to the next. At the end of each step, the atoms came to rest in their ground state. This well-defined transport could have potential applications in controlling matter waves for quantum experiments, Guéry-Odelin says.

–Michael Schirber

Michael Schirber is a Corresponding Editor for Physics Magazine based in Lyon, France.

References

  1. N. Dupont et al., “Hamiltonian ratchet for matter-wave transport,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 131, 133401 (2023).

Subject Areas

Atomic and Molecular Physics

Related Articles

Putting Few-Electron Pulses to Work
Optics

Putting Few-Electron Pulses to Work

Electrostatic repulsion between electrons usually impairs the performance of electron microscopes. Now it can be turned into an advantage. Read More »

Atom Clouds Resist Being Agitated
Nonlinear Dynamics

Atom Clouds Resist Being Agitated

Quantum effects prevent trapped atoms from thermalizing, despite being repeatedly jiggled through laser excitation. Read More »

Extending Spatial Light Modulation into the Ultraviolet
Optics

Extending Spatial Light Modulation into the Ultraviolet

An array of tiny spring-loaded mirrors creates intricate patterns of UV light for trapping and manipulating cold atoms. Read More »

More Articles