Direct Observation of Second Order Atom Tunnelling
S. Foelling, S. Trotzky, P. Cheinet, M. Feld, R. Saers, A. Widera, T., Mueller, I. Bloch

TL;DR
This paper reports the first direct, time-resolved observation of second order atom tunnelling in ultracold atoms, revealing how interactions influence correlated tunnelling and enabling new quantum dynamical regimes.
Contribution
It provides the first direct observation and characterization of second order atom tunnelling, highlighting the role of interactions in correlated quantum tunnelling processes.
Findings
Weak interactions lead to independent atom tunnelling similar to Josephson junctions.
Strong repulsive interactions cause atoms to tunnel together as a pair.
Conditional tunnelling occurs where a single atom tunnels only in the presence of another.
Abstract
Tunnelling of material particles through a classically impenetrable barrier constitutes one of the hallmark effects of quantum physics. When interactions between the particles compete with their mobility through a tunnel junction, intriguing novel dynamical behaviour can arise where particles do not tunnel independently. In single-electron or Bloch transistors, for example, the tunnelling of an electron or Cooper pair can be enabled or suppressed by the presence of a second charge carrier due to Coulomb blockade. Here we report on the first direct and time-resolved observation of correlated tunnelling of two interacting atoms through a barrier in a double well potential. We show that for weak interactions between the atoms and dominating tunnel coupling, individual atoms can tunnel independently, similar to the case in a normal Josephson junction. With strong repulsive interactions…
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