Abstract
We present experiments revealing the competing effect of quantum fluctuations and of a coherent seed in the dynamics of a spin-1 Bose-Einstein condensate and discuss the relevance of a mean-field description of our system. We first explore a near-equilibrium situation, where the mean-field equations can be linearized around a fixed point corresponding to all atoms in the same Zeeman state m=0. Preparing the system at this classical fixed point, we observe a reversible dynamics triggered by quantum fluctuations, which cannot be understood within a classical framework. We demonstrate that the classical description becomes accurate provided a coherent seed of a few atoms only is present in the other Zeeman states m=±1. In a second regime characterized by a strong nonlinearity of the mean-field equations, we observe a collapse dynamics driven by quantum fluctuations. This behavior cannot be accounted for by a classical description and persists for a large range of initial states. We show that all our experimental results can be explained with a semiclassical description (truncated Wigner approximation), using stochastic classical variables to model the quantum noise.
| Original language | English |
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| Article number | L031302 |
| Journal | Physical Review A |
| Volume | 103 |
| Issue number | 3 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Mar 2021 |
| Externally published | Yes |