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Pau Gomez

Congratulations to New ICFO PhD Graduate

Dr Pau Gómez Kabelka graduated with a thesis entitled “Spinor Bose-Einstein Comagnetometer and Interhyperfine Interactions in Rb87”

September 28, 2021

We congratulate Dr Pau Gómez Kabelka who defended his thesis today in ICFO’s auditorium with online participations due to social distancing to contain the Coronavirus pandemic.

Dr Gómez Kabelka obtained his MSc in Physics at Ludwig-Maximilians.Universitat (LMU) and Max-Plack Institut for Quantenoptik (MPQ) Munich. He joined ICFO as a Summer Fellow in 2011 to work with the Atomic Quantum Optics research group led by ICREA Prof at ICFO Morgan Mitchell. He came back in 2015 to carry out his PhD studies on ultra-cold gases, at the same research group. Dr Gómez Kabelka thesis entitled “Spinor Bose-Einstein Comagnetometer and Interhyperfine Interactions in Rb87” was supervised by ICREA Prof at ICFO Dr Morgan Mitchell.

ABSTRACT:

In this work we demonstrate the first realization of a comagnetormeter in the ultracold regime. In comparison to regular magnetometers, which are designed to maximize their magnetic field sensitivity, a comagnetometer uses paired magnetometers in a differential configuration to cancel the effects of the magnètic field and resolve weak dynamics that differently affect its constituents. Here, we implement a comagnetometer within the f =1 and f = 2 ground state hyperfine manifolds of a 87Rb spinor Bose-Einstein condensate (SBEC). The hyperfine manifolds feature nearly opposite gyromagnetic ratios and thus the sum of their precession angles is only weakly coupled to external magnetic fields, while being highly sensitive to any effect that rotates both manifolds in the same way. A fundamental limitation of the comagnetometer is f = 2  f = 1 hyperfine relaxing collisions, where the liberated kinetic energy expels colliding atoms from the optical trap. These collisions are state-dependent and can be avoided by preservin the f = 2 spin state in a stretched configuration. We show how this can be achieved at low magnetic fields, where the spin-dependent contact interaction is the dominant energy contribution and stabilizes the spin orientation of the SBEC. Under these conditions, the comagnetometer coherence time can be extended to ~1 s and the observed common magnetic field suppression is 44.0p8q dB. The technique is applied to precision measurement of the interhyperfine interaction in 87Rb. The uncertainty in the obtained interhyperfine scattering lengths is reduced by more than a factor three with respect to previously reported values. We also present preliminary studies on phase-resolved parametric amplification within a SBEC comagnetometer. In this case, the f = 2 manifold undergoes parametric amplification, while the f = 1 manifold keeps track of the rotating reference frame induced by the applied external magnetic field. We describe technical improvements to the experimental system in two areas: magnetic control and manipulation, and optical trapping and probing. The first group of improvements includes the implementation of radiofrequency (rf) and microwave (mw) driving and the development of a real-time rf source. The second group of improvements includes a pulsed optical trapping technique, a digital implementation of the laser locking scheme, and a hyperfine-selective Faraday probing method.


Thesis Committee:
Prof Dr Takuya Hirano, Gakushuin University
Prof Dr Leticia Tarruell, ICFO
Prof Dr Carsten Klempt, Leibniz Universität Hannover