An optical lattice is formed by the interference of counter-propagating laser beams, creating a spatially periodic intensity pattern. The resulting periodic scalar potential may trap neutral via the Stark shift. Atoms are cooled and congregate at the potential extrema (at maxima for blue-detuned lattices, and minima for red-detuned lattices). The resulting arrangement of trapped atoms resembles a crystal lattice and can be used for quantum simulation.
Atoms trapped in the optical lattice may move due to quantum tunneling, even if the potential well depth of the lattice points exceeds the kinetic energy of the atoms, which is similar to the in a conductor. However, a superfluid–Mott insulator transition may occur, if the interaction energy between the atoms becomes larger than the hopping energy when the well depth is very large. In the Mott insulator phase, atoms will be trapped in the potential minima and cannot move freely, which is similar to the electrons in an insulator. In the case of fermionic atoms, if the well depth is further increased the atoms are predicted to form an antiferromagnetic, i.e. Néel state at sufficiently low temperatures.
Continuous control of the periodicity of a one-dimensional optical lattice while maintaining trapped atoms in-situ was first demonstrated in 2005 using a single-axis servo-controlled galvanometer. This "accordion lattice" was able to vary the lattice periodicity from 1.30 to 9.3 μm. More recently, a different method of real-time control of the lattice periodicity was demonstrated, in which the center fringe moved less than 2.7 μm while the lattice periodicity was changed from 0.96 to 11.2 μm. Keeping atoms (or other particles) trapped while changing the lattice periodicity remains to be tested more thoroughly experimentally. Such accordion lattices are useful for controlling ultracold atoms in optical lattices, where small spacing is essential for quantum tunneling, and large spacing enables single-site manipulation and spatially resolved detection. Site-resolved detection of the occupancy of lattice sites of both bosons and fermions within a high tunneling regime is regularly performed in quantum gas microscopes.
A 1D optical lattice is formed by two counter-propagating laser beams of the same polarization. The beams will interfere, leading to a series of minima and maxima separated by , where is the wavelength of the light used to create the optical lattice. The resulting potential experienced by the atoms will be .
By use of additional laser beams, two- or three-dimensional optical lattices may be constructed. A 2D optical lattice may be constructed by interfering two orthogonal optical standing waves, giving rise to an array of 1D potential tubes. Likewise, three orthogonal optical standing waves can give rise to a 3D array of sites which may be approximated as tightly confining harmonic oscillator potentials.
If the periodic potential is to be added following condensation, as opposed to performing evaporative cooling in the lattice potential, it is necessary to consider the conditions for adiabatic loading of the lattice. The lattice must be slowly ramped up in intensity such that the condensate remains in its ground state in order to load the condensate into the ground band of the lattice. The timescale of the turn on will in general be set by the energy separation between the ground band and the first excited band.
Once cold atoms are loaded into the optical lattice, they will experience heating by various mechanisms such as spontaneous scattering of photons from the optical lattice lasers. These mechanisms generally limit the lifetime of optical lattice experiments.
A common observation technique is time of flight (TOF) imaging. TOF imaging works by first waiting some amount of time for the atoms to evolve in the lattice potential, then turning off the lattice potential. The atoms, now free, spread out at different rates according to their momenta. By controlling the amount of time the atoms are allowed to evolve, the distance travelled by atoms maps onto their momentum state when the lattice was turned off. Because the atoms in the lattice can only change in momentum by , a characteristic pattern in a TOF image of an optical-lattice system is a series of peaks along the lattice axis at momenta , where . Using TOF imaging, the momentum distribution of atoms in the lattice can be determined. Combined with in-situ absorption images (taken with the lattice still on), this is enough to determine the phase space density of the trapped atoms, an important metric for diagnosing Bose–Einstein condensation (or more generally, the formation of quantum degenerate phases of matter).
By interfering differing numbers of beams in various geometries, varying lattice geometries can be created. These range from the simplest case of two counterpropagating beams forming a one-dimensional lattice, to more complex geometries like hexagonal lattices. The variety of geometries that can be produced in optical lattice systems allow the physical realization of different Hamiltonians, such as the Bose–Hubbard model, the Kagome lattice and Sachdev–Ye–Kitaev model, and the Aubry–André model. By studying the evolution of atoms under the influence of these Hamiltonians, which may be mapped to Hamiltonians describing the dynamics of electrons in various lattice models, insight about the solutions to the Hamiltonian can be gained. This is particularly relevant to complicated Hamiltonians which are not easily solvable using theoretical or numerical techniques, such as those for strongly correlated systems.
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