Measuring finite-range phase coherence in an optical lattice using Talbot interferometry (B3)

Bodhaditya Santra, Christian Baals, Ralf Labouvie, Aranya B Bhattacherjee, Axel Pelster, and Herwig Ott:

🔓 Nature communications, 8, 15601 (2017)

One of the important goals of present research is to control and manipulate coherence in a broad variety of systems, such as semiconductor spintronics, biological photosynthetic systems, superconducting qubits and complex atomic networks. Over the past decades, interferometry of atoms and molecules has proven to be a powerful tool to explore coherence. Here we demonstrate a near-field interferometer based on the Talbot effect, which allows us to measure finite-range phase coherence of ultracold atoms in an optical lattice. We apply this interferometer to study the build-up of phase coherence after a quantum quench of a Bose–Einstein condensate residing in a one-dimensional optical lattice. Our technique of measuring finite-range phase coherence is generic, easy to adopt and can be applied in practically all lattice experiments without further modifications.