English

Defect-free atomic array formation using Hungarian matching algorithm

Atomic Physics 2017-07-27 v1

Abstract

Deterministic loading of single atoms onto arbitrary two-dimensional lattice points has recently been demonstrated, where by dynamically controlling the optical-dipole potential, atoms from a probabilistically loaded lattice were relocated to target lattice points to form a zero-entropy atomic lattice. In this atom rearrangement, how to pair atoms with the target sites is a combinatorial optimization problem: brute-force methods search all possible combinations so the process is slow, while heuristic methods are time-efficient but optimal solutions are not guaranteed. Here, we use the Hungarian matching algorithm as a fast and rigorous alternative to this problem of defect-free atomic lattice formation. Our approach utilizes an optimization cost function that restricts collision-free guiding paths so that atom loss due to collision is minimized during rearrangement. Experiments were performed with cold rubidium atoms that were trapped and guided with holographically controlled optical-dipole traps. The result of atom relocation from a partially filled 7-by-7 lattice to a 3-by-3 target lattice strongly agrees with the theoretical analysis: using the Hungarian algorithm minimizes the collisional and trespassing paths and results in improved performance, with over 50\% higher success probability than the heuristic shortest-move method.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1704.07074,
  title  = {Defect-free atomic array formation using Hungarian matching algorithm},
  author = {Woojun Lee and Hyosub Kim and Jaewook Ahn},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1704.07074},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

7 pages, 6 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T19:25:20.796Z