- Abstract
In this work, we propose a single-atom interferometer based on a fully two-dimensional spatial adiabatic passage process using a system of three identical harmonic traps in a triangular geometry. While the transfer of a single atom from the ground state of one trap to the ground state of the most distant one can successfully be achieved in a robust way for a broad range of parameter values, we point out the existence of a specific geometrical configuration of the traps for which a crossing of two energy eigenvalues occurs and the transfer of the atom fails. Instead, the wave function is robustly split into a coherent superposition between two of the traps. We show that this process can be used to construct a single-atom interferometer and discuss its performance in terms of the final population distribution among the asymptotic eigenstates of the individual traps. This interferometric scheme could be used to study space-dependent fields from ultrashort to relatively large distances, or the decay of the coherence of superposition states as a function of the distance.
- Authors
- R. Menchon-Enrich, J. Mompart, V. Ahufinger, T. Busch, i S. McEndoo
- Citation Key
- 98
- COinS Data
- Date Published
- 2015-03-02 09:48
- DOI
- 10.1103/PhysRevA.89.053611
- Issue
- 5
- Journal
- Physical Review A
- Start Page
- 053611
- URL
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.89.053611
- Volume
- 89
- Year of Publication
- 2014