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Realizing topological edge states with Rydberg-atom synthetic dimensions

S. K. Kanungo, J. D. Whalen, Y. Lu, Ming Yuan, Sohail Dasgupta, F. B. Dunning, Kaden R. A. Hazzard, T. C. Killian

2022Nature Communications99 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract A discrete degree of freedom can be engineered to match the Hamiltonian of particles moving in a real-space lattice potential. Such synthetic dimensions are powerful tools for quantum simulation because of the control they offer and the ability to create configurations difficult to access in real space. Here, in an ultracold 84 Sr atom, we demonstrate a synthetic-dimension based on Rydberg levels coupled with millimeter waves. Tunneling amplitudes between synthetic lattice sites and on-site potentials are set by the millimeter-wave amplitudes and detunings respectively. Alternating weak and strong tunneling in a one-dimensional configuration realizes the single-particle Su-Schrieffer-Heeger (SSH) Hamiltonian, a paradigmatic model of topological matter. Band structure is probed through optical excitation from the ground state to Rydberg levels, revealing symmetry-protected topological edge states at zero energy. Edge-state energies are robust to perturbations of tunneling-rates that preserve chiral symmetry, but can be shifted by the introduction of on-site potentials.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsRydberg formulaQuantum tunnellingRydberg atomHamiltonian (control theory)AmplitudePoint reflectionOptical latticeUltracold atomAtomic physicsExcitationRydberg stateWave functionTopology (electrical circuits)Quantum mechanicsCondensed matter physicsQuantumCombinatoricsMathematical optimizationIonizationIonSuperfluidityMathematicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein CondensatesTopological Materials and PhenomenaQuantum many-body systems