Leticia Tarruell
Making quantum liquids from quantum gases


Date & heure
19/06/2019
Lieu
Collège de France – 11, place Marcelin Berthelot – 75005 Paris, Room : 2, June 19, at 13:45
Accueil
Self-bound states appear in contexts as diverse as solitary waves in  channels, optical solitons in non-linear media and liquid droplets.  Their binding results from a balance between attractive forces, which  tend to make the system collapse, and repulsive ones, which stabilize it  to a finite size.In this talk, I will present experiments on dilute  quantum liquid droplets: macroscopic clusters of ultra-cold atoms that  are eight orders of magnitude more dilute than liquid Helium, but have  similar liquid-like properties. We have observed these droplets in a  mixture of Bose-Einstein condensates with effective attractive  interactions, and mapped out the associated liquid-to-gas transition. In  a second series of experiments, we have placed such droplets in an  optical waveguide and explored their connection to more conventional  bright solitons.Finally, in ongoing experiments we are studying how the  properties of the system are modified in the presence of a coherent  coupling between the two components. Interestingly, the existence of  dilute quantum droplets is a direct result of quantum fluctuations.  Thus, their properties constitute a sensitive test of quantum many-body  theories.
Lev Vaidman
What can we learn from asking where was a particle inside an interferometer?

