Probing site-resolved correlations in a spin system of ultracold molecules
Lysander Christakis, Jason S. Rosenberg, Ravin Raj, Sungjae Chi, Alan, Morningstar, David A. Huse, Zoe Z. Yan, Waseem S. Bakr

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates site-resolved measurement of quantum correlations in a 2D ultracold polar molecule system, revealing dynamics during thermalization and engineered spin models, advancing quantum simulation capabilities.
Contribution
It introduces a novel experimental approach using quantum gas microscopy to probe site-resolved correlations in ultracold polar molecules, including engineered spin models.
Findings
Measured correlation dynamics during thermalization.
Realized a dipolar spin-1/2 system with two rotational states.
Engineered a spin-anisotropic Heisenberg model using Floquet techniques.
Abstract
Synthetic quantum systems with interacting constituents play an important role in quantum information processing and in elucidating fundamental phenomena in many-body physics. Following impressive advances in cooling and trapping techniques, ensembles of ultracold polar molecules have emerged as a promising synthetic system that combines several advantageous properties. These include a large set of internal states for encoding quantum information, long nuclear and rotational coherence times and long-range, anisotropic interactions. The latter are expected to allow the exploration of intriguing phases of correlated quantum matter, such as topological superfluids, quantum spin liquids, fractional Chern insulators and quantum magnets. Probing correlations in these phases is crucial to understand their microscopic properties, necessitating the development of new experimental techniques.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
