50th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics APS Meeting
Volume 64, Number 4
Monday–Friday, May 27–31, 2019;
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Session C10: Cold Atoms in Space
10:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Tuesday, May 28, 2019
Wisconsin Center
Room: Ballroom A
Chair: Cass Sackett, University of Virginia
Abstract: C10.00002 : Space-borne matter-wave interferences
11:00 AM–11:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Ernst Rasel
(Leibniz Universität Hannover)
Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC)was awarded with the
Nobel prize only 18 years ago. At that time one only could "speculate on
areas for the application of BEC. The new "control" of matter which this
technology involves is going to bring revolutionary applications in such
fields as precision measurement and nanotechnology." Today BEC interferometry is a cornerstone for applications of
cold atoms on ground and in space and represents a new field in matter wave
optics. These interferometers strive to increase the sensitivity by
coherently spitting and separating wave packets over macroscopic spatial and
temporal scales. Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs), representing a textbook
example for a macroscopic wave packet, are the ideal source for performing
this kind of interferometry in very long baseline interferometers stretching
out over seconds on ground and during even longer interferometry times in
space. , BEC interferometry was exploited for the first time in the extended
free fall with a chip-based atom laser for Rubidium 87Rb in the QUANTUS
collaboration. The design was successfully employed for a rocket based test
of such an BEC interferometer. In the talk, I will present the first
interferometry experiments performed on the sounding rocket mission MAIUS-1
in space. The experiment pave
the way for future space experiments by NASA's CAL II and the envisioned
DLR-NASA project of "BECCAL", a multi-user facility for experiments on
quantum matter, quantum optics and BEC interferometry. Among others, they
will demonstrate important techniques necessary for satellite based quantum
tests of Einsteins principle of equivalence as pursued by the STE-QUEST
mission, for satellite gravimetry and future gravitational wave detection
based on ultracold atoms.QUANTUS cooperation comprises the group of C.
L\"{a}mmerzahl (Univ. Bremen), A. Peters (Humboldt Univ. Berlin/Ferdinand
Braun Institut), T. H\"{a}nsch/J.Reichel (MPQ/ENS), K. Sengstock/P.
Windpassinger (Univ. Hamburg/Univ. Mainz), R. Walser (TU Darmstadt), and
W.P. Schleich (Univ. Ulm). project is supported by the German Space Agency
Deutsches Zentrum f\"{u}r Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR) with funds provided by
the Federal Ministry of Economics and Technology (BMWI) under grant number
DLR 50 WM 0346. We thank the German Research Foundation for funding the
Cluster of Excellence QUEST Centre for Quantum Engineering and Space-Time
Research.