Single shot simulations of dynamic quantum many-body systems
Kaspar Sakmann, Mark Kasevich

TL;DR
This paper introduces a numerical method to simulate single experimental shots of ultracold bosonic systems by solving the many-body Schrödinger equation, enabling detailed analysis of quantum correlations and phenomena beyond traditional density measures.
Contribution
The authors develop a novel approach to generate realistic single-shot simulations from first principles for time-dependent many-body bosonic systems, capturing complex quantum correlations.
Findings
Simulated interference fringes in independent BECs.
Analyzed fluctuations in attractive BEC collisions.
Observed fluctuating vortices in rotating systems.
Abstract
The single-particle density is the most basic quantity that can be calculated from a given many-body wave function. It provides the probability to find a particle at a given position when the average over many realizations of an experiment is taken. However, the outcome of single experimental shots of ultracold atom experiments is determined by the -particle probability density. This difference can lead to surprising results. For example, independent Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs) with definite particle numbers form interference fringes even though no fringes would be expected based on the single-particle density [1-4]. By drawing random deviates from the -particle probability density single experimental shots can be simulated from first principles [1, 3, 5]. However, obtaining expressions for the -particle probability density of realistic time-dependent many-body systems has…
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