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      Observation of self-amplifying Hawking radiation in an analog black hole laser

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          Abstract

          It has been proposed that a black hole horizon should generate Hawking radiation. In order to test this theory, we have created a narrow, low density, very low temperature atomic Bose-Einstein condensate, containing an analog black hole horizon and an inner horizon, as in a charged black hole. We observe Hawking radiation emitted by the black hole. This is the output of the black hole laser. We also observe the exponential growth of a standing wave between the horizons. The latter results from interference between the negative energy partners of the Hawking radiation and the negative energy particles reflected from the inner horizon. We thus observe self-amplifying Hawking radiation.

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          Experimental Black-Hole Evaporation?

          W. Unruh (1981)
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            Particle emission rates from a black hole: Massless particles from an uncharged, nonrotating hole

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              Quantum Simulation of Antiferromagnetic Spin Chains in an Optical Lattice

              Understanding exotic forms of magnetism in quantum mechanical systems is a central goal of modern condensed matter physics, with implications from high temperature superconductors to spintronic devices. Simulating magnetic materials in the vicinity of a quantum phase transition is computationally intractable on classical computers due to the extreme complexity arising from quantum entanglement between the constituent magnetic spins. Here we employ a degenerate Bose gas confined in an optical lattice to simulate a chain of interacting quantum Ising spins as they undergo a phase transition. Strong spin interactions are achieved through a site-occupation to pseudo-spin mapping. As we vary an applied field, quantum fluctuations drive a phase transition from a paramagnetic phase into an antiferromagnetic phase. In the paramagnetic phase the interaction between the spins is overwhelmed by the applied field which aligns the spins. In the antiferromagnetic phase the interaction dominates and produces staggered magnetic ordering. Magnetic domain formation is observed through both in-situ site-resolved imaging and noise correlation measurements. By demonstrating a route to quantum magnetism in an optical lattice, this work should facilitate further investigations of magnetic models using ultracold atoms, improving our understanding of real magnetic materials.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                23 September 2014
                2014-11-09
                Article
                10.1038/NPHYS3104
                1409.6550
                509fc09c-4e4c-4dd9-82a5-08952c1c5c33

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                Nature Phys. 10, 864 (2014)
                The second version has one corrected equation, and "Trento group" is replaced by "Trento-Bologna collaboration"
                cond-mat.quant-gas gr-qc

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