M.R. Andrews, C.G. Townsend, H.-J. Miesner, D.S. Durfee, D.M. Kurn, and W. Ketterle

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Observation of interference between two Bose condensates

M.R. Andrews, C.G. Townsend, H.-J. Miesner, D.S. Durfee, D.M. Kurn, and W. Ketterle
Department of Physics and Research Laboratory of Electronics,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139
(December 11, 1996. Resubmitted December 23, 1996.)

Abstract
Interference between two freely expanding Bose-Einstein condensates has
been observed. Two condensates separated by 40 m were created by evap-
oratively cooling sodium atoms in a double-well potential created by magnetic
and optical forces. High contrast matter-wave interference fringes with a pe-
riod of 15 m were observed after switching o the potential and letting the
condensates expand for 40 ms and overlap. This demonstrates that Bose con-
densed atoms are \laser-like," i.e. that they are coherent and show long-range
correlations. Our results have direct implications for the atom-laser and the
Josephson e ect for atoms.
PACS: 03.75.Fi, 05.30.Jp, 32.80.Pj, 64.60.-i, 75.40.Cx, 75.45.+j

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1
The realization of Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) in dilute atomic gases [1,2] has cre-
ated great interest in this new form of matter. One of its striking features is a macroscopic
population of the quantum-mechanical ground state of the system at nite temperature.
The Bose condensate is characterized by the absence of thermal excitation, its kinetic en-
ergy solely due to the zero-point motion in the trapping potential (in general modi ed by
the repulsive interaction between atoms). It is this property which has been used to detect
and study the Bose condensate in previous experiments. The Bose-Einstein phase transition
was observed by the sudden appearance of a \peak" of ultracold atoms, either in images
of expanding clouds (time-of- ight pictures) [1{3] or as a dense core inside the magnetic
trap [4,5]. The anisotropic expansion of the cloud [1{3] and the appearance of collective ex-
citations at frequencies di erent from multiples of the trapping frequencies [6,7] were found
to be in quantitative agreement with the predictions of the mean- eld theory for a weakly
interacting Bose gas [8{11]. However, similar anisotropic expansion and excitation frequen-
cies have been predicted for a dense classical gas in the hydrodynamic regime [12,13], and
are therefore not distinctive features of BEC. Indeed, the non-linear Schrodinger equation
is equivalent to a hydrodynamic equation for super uid ow which, in many situations, is
very similar to a classical hydrodynamic equation [9,13,14]. So far, the experiments on BEC
have mainly studied the \very cold" nature of the Bose condensate, but not revealed prop-
erties which directly re ect its coherent nature, such as its phase, the order parameter (the
macroscopic wavefunction), or long-range order. In superconductors, the phase of the order
parameter was directly observed through the Josephson e ect, whereas in super uid helium
the observation of the motion of quantized vortices [15] provided indirect evidence.
The coherence of a Bose condensate has been the subject of many theoretical papers.
Kagan and collaborators predicted that the Bose condensate will form rst as a quasi-
condensate consisting of very cold atoms but lacking long-range order, which is only estab-
lished on a much longer time scale [16]. Stoof predicted that a coherent condensate would
form immediately [17]. Several groups discussed interference experiments and quantum tun-
neling for condensates [18{29]. If the condensate is initially in a state of well-de ned atom
2
number, its order parameter, which is the macroscopic wavefunction, vanishes. However,
the quantum measurement process should still lead to quantum interference and \create"
the phase of the condensate [20,23{25,27,28], thus breaking the global gauge invariance
which re ects particle number conservation [30]. This is analogous to Anderson's famous
gedanken experiment, testing whether two initially separated buckets of super uid helium
would show a xed value of the relative phase, and therefore a Josephson current, once
they are connected [31]. Arguments for and against such a xed relative phase have been
given [31,32].
Even if the phase exists, the question was raised of whether it can be directly measured,
since it was predicted to be a ected by collisions during ballistic expansion [12,26] or by
phase di usion due to the mean eld of Bose condensed atoms [21,25,27,33]. Finally, the
phase of the condensate plays a crucial role in the discussions of an atom laser, a source of
coherent matter waves [34{37].
The phase of a condensate is the argument of a complex number (the macroscopic wave-
function) and is not an observable. It is only the relative phase between two condensates
which can be measured. In this paper we report on the observation of high-contrast inter-
ference between two atomic Bose condensates, which is clear evidence for coherence in such
systems.
Two Bose condensates were produced using a modi cation of our previous setup [3,7].
Sodium atoms were optically cooled and trapped and then transferred into a double-well
potential. The atoms were further cooled by radio frequency (rf) induced evaporation [38].
The condensates were con ned in a cloverleaf magnetic trap [3] with the trapping potential
determined by the axial curvature of the magnetic eld B = 94 G/cm2, the radial gradient
00

B = 120 G/cm, and the bias eld B0 = 0:75 G. The atom clouds were cigar shaped, with
0

the long axis horizontal. A double-well potential was created by focusing blue-detuned far-
o -resonant laser light into the center of the magnetic trap, generating a repulsive optical
dipole force. The far detuning of the argon ion laser line at 514 nm relative to the sodium
resonance at 589 nm made heating due to spontaneous emission negligible. This laser beam
3
was focused into a light sheet with cross section 12  67 m2 (1=e2 radii), having its long
axis perpendicular to the long axes of the condensates. The argon ion laser beam propa-
gated nearly collinearly with the vertical probe beam. The alignment of the light sheet was
performed by imaging the focused argon ion laser beam with the same camera used to image
the condensates.
Evaporative cooling was extended well below the transition temperature to obtain con-
densates without a discernible normal fraction. Condensates containing 5  106 sodium
atoms in the F = 1; mF = ?1 ground state were produced within 30 seconds. The presence
of the light sheet neither changed the number of condensed atoms from our previous work [3],
nor required a modi cation of the evaporation path. This demonstrates that problems with
heating encountered earlier with an optically-plugged magnetic trap [2] were purely tech-
nical. In the present application, the argon ion laser beam is not needed to avoid a loss
process, giving complete freedom in the choice of laser power and focal parameters.
The double condensate was directly observed using nondestructive phase-contrast imag-
ing (Fig. (1a)). This technique is an extension of our previous work on dispersive imaging [4],
greatly improving the signal-to-noise ratio. The probe light frequency was far detuned from
a resonant transition (1.77 GHz to the red), and thus absorption was negligible. Images were
formed by photons scattered coherently into the forward direction. The phase modulation
caused by the condensate was transformed into an intensity modulation at the camera by
retarding the transmitted probe beam a quarter wave with a phase plate in the Fourier
plane. Previously, the transmitted probe beam was blocked by a thin wire (dark ground
imaging).
Interference between the condensates was observed by simultaneously switching o the
magnetic trap and the argon ion light sheet. The two expanding condensates overlapped
and were observed by absorption imaging. After 40 ms time-of- ight, an optical pumping
beam transferred the atoms from the F = 1 hyper ne state to the F = 2 state. With a 10 s
delay, the atoms were exposed to a short (50 s) circularly polarized probe beam resonant
with the F = 2 ! F = 3 transition and absorbed about 20 photons each. Under these
0

4
conditions the atoms moved about 5 m horizontally during the exposure.
Absorption imaging usually integrates along the line-of-sight and has therefore only two-
dimensional spatial resolution. Because the depth of eld for 15 m fringes is comparable
to the size of an expanded cloud, and because the fringes are in general not parallel with
the axis of the probe light, line-of-sight integration would cause considerable blurring. This
was avoided and three-dimensional resolution was accomplished by restricting absorption of
the probe light to a thin horizontal slice of the cloud. To do this the optical pumping beam
was focused into a light sheet of adjustable thickness (typically 100 m), and a width of a
few mm. This pumping beam propagated perpendicularly to the probe light and parallel to
the long axis of the trap [39]. As a result, the probe light was only absorbed by a thin slice
of the cloud where the atoms were optically pumped. Because high spatial resolution was
required from only the fraction of atoms residing in the slice, a good signal-to-noise ratio
required condensates with millions of atoms.
In general, the pattern of interference fringes di ers for continuous and pulsed sources.
Two point-like monochromatic continuous sources would produce curved (hyperbolic) inter-
ference fringes. In contrast, two point-like pulsed sources show straight interference fringes;
if d is the separation between two point-like condensates, then their relative speed at any
point in space is d=t, where t is the delay between pulsing on the source (switching o the
trap) and observation. The fringe period is the de Broglie wavelength  associated with the
relative motion of atoms with mass m (h is Planck's constant):
ht :
 = md (1)

The amplitude and contrast of the interference pattern depends on the overlap between the
two condensates.
Fig. (2) shows the interference pattern of two condensates after 40 ms time-of- ight. A
series of measurements with fringe spacings of 15 m showed a contrast varying between
20 and 40%. When the imaging system was calibrated with a standard optical test pattern
we found 40% contrast at the same spatial frequency. Hence the contrast of the atomic
5
interference was between 50 and 100%. Since the condensates are much larger than the
observed fringe spacing, they must have a high degree of spatial coherence.
We observed that the fringe period became smaller for larger powers of the argon ion
laser sheet (Fig. (3a)). Larger power increased the distance between the two condensates
(Fig. (1a)). From phase-contrast images we determined the distance d between the density
maxima of the two condensates versus argon ion laser power. Fig. (3b) shows that the
fringe period versus maxima separation is in reasonable agreement with the prediction of
Eq. (1), although this equation strictly applies only to two point sources. Wallis et. al. [26]
calculated the interference pattern for two extended condensates in a harmonic potential with
a Gaussian barrier. They concluded that Eq. (1) remains valid for the central fringes if d is
replaced by the geometric mean of the center-of-mass' separation and the distance between
the density maxima of the two condensates. This prediction is also shown in Fig. (3b). The
agreement is satisfactory given our experimental uncertainties in the determination of the
maxima separations (3 m) and of the center-of-mass separations (20%). We conclude
that the numerical simulations for extended interacting condensates [26] are consistent with
the observed fringe periods.
To support our interpretation of matter-wave interference a series of tests was performed.
To demonstrate that the fringe pattern was due to two condensates we compared to the pat-
tern from just a single condensate. This is equivalent to performing a double-slit experiment
and covering one of the slits. One condensate was illuminated with a focused beam of weak
resonant light 20 ms before release, causing it to disappear almost completely due to optical
pumping to untrapped states and also due to evaporation after being heated by photon recoil
(Fig. (1b)). The resulting time-of- ight image did not exhibit interference, and the pro le
of a single expanded condensate matched one side of the pro le of a double condensate as
shown in Fig. (4). The pro le of a single expanded condensate showed some coarse structure,
which was most likely due to the non-parabolic shape of the con ning potential. We found
that the structure became more pronounced when the focus of the argon ion laser had some
weak secondary intensity maxima. In addition, the interference between two condensates
6
disappeared when the argon ion light sheet was left on for 2 ms after the magnetic trap was
switched o . The absorption images showed that the two condensates were pushed apart
and did not subsequently overlap.
Another test con rmed that the fringes were not due to density waves of two colliding
condensates. Since the interference pattern depends on the phases of the condensates, the
fringes should be sensitive to perturbations which strongly a ect the phase but weakly a ect
the motion. Applying resonant rf radiation during the expansion of the two condensates
was found to cause a reduction of the fringe contrast by up to a factor of 4. The greatest
reduction in contrast was found when the rf was swept 25 times between 0 and 300 kHz at
1 kHz. When a single condensate was exposed to the same rf radiation, no clearly discernible
di erences in the time-of- ight pictures were found. A possible explanation for the reduced
fringe contrast is that frequent sweeps through the resonance in slightly inhomogeneous dc
and rf magnetic elds created atoms in di erent superpositions of hyper ne states which
only partially interfered.
The visibility of the fringes depended critically upon several imaging parameters, as
expected for the observation of such a nely striated structure. The fringes became almost
invisible when the thickness of the optical pumping sheet was increased to 800 m, whereas
the focus of the imaging system could be varied over a wider range of up to 1 mm without
losing contrast. This implies that the fringes were at a small angle 20 mrad with respect
to the probe beam.
It is remarkable how robust the interference was. The fringes were very regular although
no attempt was made to control residual magnetic elds during the expansion. The high
contrast implies that neither phase di usion during expansion nor collisions with normal
atoms were important. The latter aspect was studied in more detail when the rf evaporation
was stopped at higher temperatures. We still observed fringes of identical contrast [40], but
with decreasing amplitude due to the smaller number of condensed atoms. At the transition
temperature the fringes and the condensate disappeared.
Let us nally discuss the question of whether the two condensates were truly independent.
7
When the power of the argon ion laser was varied we realized both the cases of well-separated
and connected condensates. The chemical potential of the Bose condensates was about
4 kHz. The height of the barrier created by the argon ion laser was estimated to be about
2 kHz per mW power. At 100 mW laser power, the barrier height was 10 K, resulting in
a cloud that was already split well above the phase transition temperature of about 2 K.
The tunneling time of well-separated condensates was estimated to be larger than the age
of the universe [19], and thus our experiment should be equivalent to Anderson's gedanken
experiment (\What is the relative phase of two buckets of liquid helium?") [31], and also to
an interference experiment between two independent lasers [41]. It has been shown by several
authors [20,23,24,27] that two independent condensates will show high contrast interference
fringes with a phase that varies between experiments. In our experiment, however, even
a xed relative phase would have been detected as being random because of mechanical
instabilities on a 10 m scale. Once it becomes possible to distinguish between xed and
random phases, we should be able to investigate how phase coherence is established and
lost. One possible experiment would be to adiabatically switch on the argon ion laser after
condensation, thus splitting a single condensate, and to study how a de nite phase becomes
random as a function of time.
For argon laser powers below 5 mW, the interference pattern was slightly curved and
symmetric about a central fringe which was always dark (Fig. (2)). We conjecture that for
small separations the two condensates overlap very early during the expansion and inter-
actions between them are not negligible. When the power of the light sheet was lowered
further, the number of fringes decreased, while the central dark feature persisted and even-
tually lost contrast. For such low powers we were in the regime when the condensates were
not fully separated.
The observation of matter-wave interference with a 15 m period required sources of
atoms with a matter wavelength of 30 m, corresponding to a kinetic energy of 0.5 nK
or 1/2,600th of the single photon recoil energy. This energy is much smaller than the
mean eld energy of Bose condensates in our trap (about 100 nK), and also much less than
8
the zero-point energy (about 15 nK). Fortunately, the extremely anisotropic expansion of
the condensates released from the cloverleaf trap yields atoms with very long de Broglie
wavelengths in the axial direction.
The techniques of cutting the condensate and three-dimensional absorption imaging in-
troduced in this work open up possibilities for further investigations. We have switched
o the trap and observed the existence of the relative phase of two condensates. The next
logical step is to combine this technique with our recently demonstrated output coupler for
a Bose condensate [42]. In that case, recording the interference pattern for the rst output
pulse creates a coherent state of the trapped condensate through the quantum measurement
process. Subsequent output pulses could be used to study the time evolution of the phase
and loss of coherence due to phase di usion [21,27,33].
By using a thinner barrier (1 m) between the two condensates it should become
possible to reliably establish a weak link and study quantum tunneling, or the Josephson
e ect for atoms [18,19,29]. For superconductors, the Josephson e ect is the usual way of
detecting the phase of the order parameter. For atomic Bose condensates, we observed a
relative phase directly. This is an example of the complementary physics which can be
explored with Bose condensation in dilute atomic gases.
Furthermore, we have shown that it is technically feasible to manipulate magnetically
trapped Bose condensates with far-o resonant laser beams. This creates the possibility
to perform \microsurgery" of Bose condensates, such as shaping the trapping potential or
creating localized excitations, e.g., using such a laser beam as a \paddle-wheel" to excite
rotational motion.
In conclusion, the observation of high contrast interference fringes is clear evidence for
spatial coherence over the extent of the condensates [43]. In theoretical treatments, coher-
ence (o -diagonal long-range order) has been used as the de ning criterion for Bose-Einstein
condensation [30]. Our results also demonstrate that a Bose condensate consists of \laser-
like" atoms, or atoms which interfere without any further selection by collimating apertures.
This opens up the eld of coherent atomic beams. Our recent work on an output coupler for
9
a Bose condensate [42] already contained all the elements of an atom laser [44] because it
created multiple pulses which should have a coherence length exceeding the size of a single
condensate. Although this has already been described as the rst realization of an atom
laser [45], we felt the demonstration that Bose condensed atoms have a phase which can be
measured was a crucial missing feature. The present work overcomes this and demonstrates
that a Bose condensate with an output coupler is an atom laser.
Note added in proof: We have recently combined the rf output coupler [42] with the
observation of interference between two condensates. The output pulse from a split conden-
sate showed high contrast interference very similar to the results discussed above [46]. This
proves that the rf output coupler preserves the coherence of the condensates.
(Please see ref. [47] for our acknowledgements).

10
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11
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[30] K. Huang, Statistical Mechanics, 2nd ed. (Wiley, New York, 1987).
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[33] M. Lewenstein and L. You, Phys. Rev. Lett. 77, 3489 (1996).
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Vol. 37, p. 181, and references therein.
[39] Inhomogeneities in the pumping sheet caused weak striations which were perpendicular
to the observed fringes and could therefore be clearly distinguished.
[40] The thermal cloud had expanded so much that it contributed negligible background.
[41] R. L. P eegor and L. Mandel, Phys. Rev. 159, 1084 (1967).
[42] M.-O. Mewes, M. R. Andrews, D. M. Kurn, D. S. Durfee, C. G. Townsend, and W.
Ketterle, 1996, submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett.
[43] We are not distinguishing here between di erent aspects of coherence which are ex-
pressed by expectation values of products of one, two or four eld operators.
[44] E. Cornell, J. Res. Natl. Inst. Stand. Technol. 101, 419 (1996).
[45] K. Burnett, Physics World (October 1996), p. 18.
[46] In these experiments, we transferred about 50% of the atoms into the F = 1; mF = 0
state, immediately turned o the argon ion light sheet to allow the two out-coupled con-
densates to overlap, and switched o the magnetic trap 2 ms later to avoid acceleration

13
by quadratic Zeeman shifts.
[47] We are grateful to M. Naraschewski and H. Wallis for enlightening discussions. Their
theoretical simulations [26] were very helpful in selecting the nal parameters for the
experiment. We thankfully acknowledge M.-O. Mewes for essential contributions during
the early phase of the experiment, S. Inouye for experimental assistance, and D. Klepp-
ner and D. Pritchard for valuable discussions. This work was supported by ONR, NSF,
JSEP and the Packard Foundation. D.M.K. would like to acknowledge support from
an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship, C.G.T. from a NATO Science Fellowship, and
H.-J.M. from DAAD (NATO Science Fellowship).

14
FIGURES

FIG. 1. A: Phase-contrast images of a single Bose condensate (left) and double Bose conden-
sates, taken in the trap. The distance between the two condensates was varied by changing the
power of the argon ion laser-light sheet from 7 to 43 mW. B: Phase-contrast image of an originally
double condensate, with the lower condensate eliminated.

15
FIG. 2. Interference pattern of two expanding condensates observed after 40 ms time-of- ight,
for two di erent powers of the argon ion light sheet. The fringe periods were 20 and 15 m, and
the maximum absorptions were 90 and 50%, for the left and right images, respectively. The elds
of view are 1.1 mm horizontally by 0.5 mm vertically. Note that the images are raw data. The
horizontal widths are compressed fourfold, which enhances the e ect of fringe curvature. For the
determination of fringe spacing the dark central fringe on the left was excluded.

16
25
A
Fringe Period (µm)

20

15

0 10 20 30
Power (mW)

B
Fringe Period (µm)

20

10

0
30 40 50
Separation (µm)

FIG. 3. A: Fringe period versus power in the argon ion laser-light sheet. B: Fringe period versus
observed spacing between the density maxima of the two condensates. Solid line is the dependence
given by Eq. (1), and dotted line is the theoretical prediction of Ref. [26] incorporating a constant
center-of-mass separation of 96 m neglecting the small variation (10%) with laser power.

17
FIG. 4. Comparison between time-of- ight images for a single and double condensate, showing
vertical pro les through time-of- ight pictures similar to Fig. (2). The solid line is a pro le of two
interfering condensates, and the dashed line is the pro le of a single condensate, both released from
the same double-well potential. The argon ion laser power was 14 mW, the fringe period 13 m
and the time-of- ight 40 ms. The pro les were horizontally integrated over 450 m. The dashed
pro le was multiplied by a factor of 1.5 to account for fewer atoms in the single condensate, most
likely due to loss during elimination of the second half.

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