Orbital excitation blockade and algorithmic cooling in quantum gases
Waseem S. Bakr, Philipp M. Preiss, M. Eric Tai, Ruichao Ma, Jonathan, Simon, Markus Greiner

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of orbital excitation blockade in ultracold atoms, demonstrating a new cooling method for quantum gases and suggesting applications in quantum computing with scalable two-qubit gates.
Contribution
It introduces orbital excitation blockade in optical lattices and applies it to develop a novel algorithmic cooling technique for quantum gases.
Findings
Observation of staircase-type excitation behavior
Demonstration of orbital excitation blockade as a cooling mechanism
Potential for scalable quantum computing architectures
Abstract
Interaction blockade occurs when strong interactions in a confined few-body system prevent a particle from occupying an otherwise accessible quantum state. Blockade phenomena reveal the underlying granular nature of quantum systems and allow the detection and manipulation of the constituent particles, whether they are electrons, spins, atoms, or photons. The diverse applications range from single-electron transistors based on electronic Coulomb blockade to quantum logic gates in Rydberg atoms. We have observed a new kind of interaction blockade in transferring ultracold atoms between orbitals in an optical lattice. In this system, atoms on the same lattice site undergo coherent collisions described by a contact interaction whose strength depends strongly on the orbital wavefunctions of the atoms. We induce coherent orbital excitations by modulating the lattice depth and observe a…
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