Diffusion can be used to infer the microscopic features of a system from the observation of its macroscopic dynamics. Brownian motion accurately describes many diffusive systems, but non-Brownian and nonergodic features are often observed on short timescales. Here, we trap a single ultracold caesium atom in a periodic potential and measure its diffusion. We engineer the particle-environment interaction to fully control motion over a broad range of diffusion constants and timescales. We use a powerful stroboscopic imaging method to detect single-particle trajectories and analyse both non-equilibrium diffusion properties and the approach to ergodicity. Whereas the variance and two-time correlation function exhibit apparent Brownian motion at all times, higher-order correlations reveal strong non-Brownian behaviour. We additionally observe the slow convergence of the exponential displacement distribution to a Gaussian and-unexpectedly-a much slower approach to ergodicity, in perfect agreement with an analytical continuous-time random-walk model. Our experimental system offers an ideal testbed for the detailed investigation of complex diffusion processes.
CITATION STYLE
Kindermann, F., Dechant, A., Hohmann, M., Lausch, T., Mayer, D., Schmidt, F., … Widera, A. (2017). Nonergodic diffusion of single atoms in a periodic potential. Nature Physics, 13(2), 137–141. https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys3911
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