An emergent atom pump driven by global dissipation in a quantum gas

Tobias Donner

The time evolution of a driven quantum system can be strongly affected by dissipation. Although this mainly implies that the system relaxes to a steady state, in some cases it can lead to the appearance of new phases and trigger emergent dynamics. In our experiment, we study a Bose-Einstein condensate dispersively coupled to a high finesse optical resonator. The cavity is populated by scattering photons from a transverse drive illuminating the atoms. The sum of the drive and the self-consistent intracavity field provides a lattice potential. When the dissipation via cavity losses and the coherent timescales are comparable, we find a regime of persistent oscillations where the cavity field does not reach a steady state. In this regime the atoms experience a potential that periodically deforms itself, even without providing an external time dependent drive. Eventually, the dynamic lattice triggers a pumping mechanism. We show complementary measurements of the light field and of the atomic transport, proving the connection between the emergent non-stationarity and the pump.