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Verònica Ahufinger, Maciej Lewenstein, Anna Sanpera (Beteiligte)

Ultracold Atoms in Optical Lattices


Simulating quantum many-body systems
2017. 496 S. 104 line, 29 half-tone figures. 247 mm
Verlag/Jahr: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS; OUP OXFORD 2017
ISBN: 0-19-878580-1 (0198785801)
Neue ISBN: 978-0-19-878580-4 (9780198785804)

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This book explores the physics of atoms frozen to ultralow temperatures and trapped in periodic light structures. It introduces the reader to the spectacular progress achieved on the field of ultracold gases and describes present and future challenges in condensed matter physics, high energy physics, and quantum computation.
Quantum computers, though not yet available on the market, will revolutionize the future of information processing. Quantum computers for special purposes like quantum simulators are already within reach. The physics of ultracold atoms, ions and molecules offer unprecedented possibilities of control of quantum many body systems and novel possibilities of applications to quantum information processing and quantum metrology. Particularly fascinating is the possibility
of using ultracold atoms in lattices to simulate condensed matter or even high energy physics.

This book provides a complete and comprehensive overview of ultracold lattice gases as quantum simulators. It opens up an interdisciplinary field involving atomic, molecular and optical physics, quantum optics, quantum information, condensed matter and high energy physics. The book includes some introductory chapters on basic concepts and methods, and then focuses on the physics of spinor, dipolar, disordered, and frustrated lattice gases. It reviews in detail the physics of artificial lattice
gauge fields with ultracold gases. The last part of the book covers simulators of quantum computers. After a brief course in quantum information theory, the implementations of quantum computation with ultracold gases are discussed, as well as our current understanding of condensed matter from a
quantum information perspective.
`There is much of value to be found in this book. It will be appreciated not only by those seeking a comprehensive and stimulating introduction to the field, but also by seasoned researchers looking for an astute state of the art survey of the field.´ Michael Belsley, Contemporary Physics