Observation of atomic speckle and Hanbury Brown-Twiss correlations in guided matter waves

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Abstract

Speckle patterns produced by multiple independent light sources are a manifestation of the coherence of the light field. Second-order correlations exhibited in phenomena such as photon bunching, termed the Hanbury Brown-Twiss effect, are a measure of quantum coherence. Here we observe for the first time atomic speckle produced by atoms transmitted through an optical waveguide, and link this to second-order correlations of the atomic arrival times. We show that multimode matter-wave guiding, which is directly analogous to multimode light guiding in optical fibres, produces a speckled transverse intensity pattern and atom bunching, whereas single-mode guiding of atoms that are output-coupled from a Bose-Einstein condensate yields a smooth intensity profile and a second-order correlation value of unity. Both first- and second-order coherence are important for applications requiring a fully coherent atomic source, such as squeezed-atom interferometry. © 2011 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

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Dall, R. G., Hodgman, S. S., Manning, A. G., Johnsson, M. T., Baldwin, K. G. H., & Truscott, A. G. (2011). Observation of atomic speckle and Hanbury Brown-Twiss correlations in guided matter waves. Nature Communications, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms1292

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