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Trapping single atoms on a nanophotonic circuit with configurable tweezer lattices

May E. Kim,T. Chang,2 Authors,Chen-Lung Hung

2018 · DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-09635-7
Nature Communications · 68 Citations

TLDR

It is shown that single atoms can be transported from a reservoir into close proximity of a photonic interface, potentially allowing for the synthesis of a defect-free atom-nanophotonic hybrid lattice.

Abstract

Trapped atoms near nanophotonics form an exciting platform for bottom-up synthesis of strongly interacting quantum matter. The ability to induce tunable long-range atom-atom interactions with photons presents an opportunity to explore many-body physics and quantum optics. Here we implement a configurable optical tweezer array over a planar photonic circuit tailored for cold atom integration and control for trapping and high-fidelity imaging of one or more atoms in an array directly on a photonic structure. Using an optical conveyor belt formed by a moving optical lattice within a tweezer potential, we show that single atoms can be transported from a reservoir into close proximity of a photonic interface, potentially allowing for the synthesis of a defect-free atom-nanophotonic hybrid lattice. Our experimental platform can be integrated with generic planar photonic waveguides and resonators, promising a pathway towards on-chip many-body quantum optics and applications in quantum technology. There is growing interest in hybrid atom-nanophotonic systems for quantum optics and quantum many-body simulations. Here, the authors demonstrate trapping, fluorescence imaging and optical conveyor belt transport of cold atoms on a planar nanophotonic surface using configurable optical tweezers.