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Quantum Chemistry
Assembling a Bose-Hubbard superfluid from tweezer-controlled single atoms
arXiv
Authors: William J. Eckner, Theodor Lukin Yelin, Alec Cao, Aaron W. Young, Nelson Darkwah Oppong, Lode Pollet, Adam M. Kaufman
Year
2025
Paper ID
36063
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
138
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Quantum simulation relies on the preparation and control of low-entropy many-body systems to reveal the behavior of classically intractable models. The development of new approaches for realizing such systems therefore represents a frontier in quantum science. Here we experimentally demonstrate a new protocol for generating ultracold, itinerant many-body states in a tunnel-coupled two-dimensional optical lattice. We do this by adiabatically connecting a near-ground-state-cooled array of up to 50 single strontium-86 atoms with a Bose-Hubbard superfluid. Through comparison with finite-temperature quantum-Monte-Carlo calculations, we estimate that the entropy per particle of the prepared many-body states is approximately 2 kB, and that the achieved temperatures are consistent with a significant superfluid fraction. This represents the first time that itinerant many-body systems have been prepared from rearranged atoms, opening the door to bottom-up assembly of a wide range of neutral-atom and molecular systems.
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- This paper contributes to the Quantum Simulation research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- Quantum simulation relies on the preparation and control of low-entropy many-body systems to reveal the behavior of classically intractable models.
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