Controlling the interactions in a cold atom quantum impurity system
Thomas Hewitt, Tom Bertheas, Manan Jain, Yusuke Nishida, Giovanni, Barontini

TL;DR
This study demonstrates precise control and characterization of interactions in a cold atom quantum impurity system using Feshbach spectroscopy and optical tweezers, enabling advanced quantum simulations and information processing.
Contribution
The paper introduces an experimental setup for controlling impurity-bath interactions in a cold atom system, including Feshbach resonance characterization and interaction tuning via optical methods.
Findings
Detection of multiple inter-dimensional Feshbach resonances.
Good agreement between experimental data and scattering theory.
Ability to tune and screen interactions using optical tweezer wavelength.
Abstract
We implement an experimental architecture in which a single atom of K is trapped in an optical tweezer, and is immersed in a bath of Rb atoms at ultralow temperatures. In this regime, the motion of the single trapped atom is confined to the lowest quantum vibrational levels. This realizes an elementary and fully controllable quantum impurity system. For the trapping of the K atom, we use a species-selective dipole potential, that allows us to independently manipulate the quantum impurity and the bath. We concentrate on the characterization and control of the interactions between the two subsystems. To this end, we perform Feshbach spectroscopy, detecting several inter-dimensional confinement-induced Feshbach resonances for the KRb interspecies scattering length, that parametrizes the strength of the interactions. We compare our data to a theory for inter-dimensional scattering, finding…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies
