English

Active SU(1,1) atom interferometry

Quantum Gases 2017-11-15 v1 Quantum Physics

Abstract

Active interferometers use amplifying elements for beam splitting and recombination. We experimentally implement such a device by using spin exchange in a Bose-Einstein condensate. The two interferometry modes are initially empty spin states that get spontaneously populated in the process of parametric amplification. This nonlinear mechanism scatters atoms into both modes in a pairwise fashion and generates a nonclassical state. Finally, a matched second period of spin exchange is performed that nonlinearly amplifies the output signal and maps the phase onto readily detectable first moments. Depending on the accumulated phase this nonlinear readout can reverse the initial dynamics and deamplify the entangled state back to empty spin states. This sequence is described in the framework of SU(1,1) mode transformations and compared to the SU(2) angular momentum description of passive interferometers.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1711.04552,
  title  = {Active SU(1,1) atom interferometry},
  author = {D. Linnemann and J. Schulz and W. Muessel and P. Kunkel and M. Prüfer and A. Frölian and H. Strobel and M. K. Oberthaler},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1711.04552},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

10 pages, 6 figures; invited article for Quantum Science and Technology