Deborah Jin Doctoral Thesis Award Session
Bose-Einstein Condensation of Dipolar Molecules
2:00 pm – 2:30 pmAchieving the quantum control of many-body systems with ever more complex constituents and interactions has been a driving force of AMO physics. Quantum degenerate gases of dipolar molecules are the latest frontier in this endeavor: rich molecular internal structures and long-range, anisotropic dipole-dipole interactions promise to revolutionize the field, from quantum simulation to quantum information.
Reaching the Bose-Einstein condensation of dipolar molecules has been an elusive goal for almost two decades. Here, I report on the first observation of this quantum state of matter and on the experimental journey that brought us to this breakthrough. In particular, I will focus on how we observed and understood strong two- and three-body losses and devised a technique to shape intermolecular potentials to stabilize dense molecular ensembles. With this level of quantum control we could evaporatively cool our sample to quantum degeneracy, reaching a BEC with a lifetime of 2 s. From this starting point, the tuning of dipolar interactions opens the door to the full study and employment of quantum degenerate samples of dipolar molecules.
- 2:00 pm – 2:30 pmBose-Einstein Condensation of Dipolar Molecules
Niccolò Bigagli (presenter)
- 2:30 pm – 3:00 pmFINALIST: Bingtian YeHarnessing many-body dynamics for quantum metrology in atomic, molecular and optical systems
Bingtian Ye (presenter)
- 3:00 pm – 3:30 pmMetrology of noise, time, and entanglement through chaos and atomic engineering
Adam L Shaw (presenter)
- 3:30 pm – 4:00 pmDirect Excitation of the 229Th Isomer in Solid-State Hosts
Ricky Elwell (presenter)