4,978 research outputs found

    Spatially Modulated Interaction Induced Bound States and Scattering Resonances

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    We study the two-body problem with a spatially modulated interaction potential using a two-channel model, in which the inter-channel coupling is provided by an optical standing wave and its strength modulates periodically in space. As the modulation amplitudes increases, there will appear a sequence of bound states. Part of them will cause divergence of the effective scattering length, defined through the phase shift in the asymptotic behavior of scattering states. We also discuss how the local scattering length, defined through short-range behavior of scattering states, modulates spatially in different regimes. These results provide a theoretical guideline for new control technique in cold atom toolbox, in particular, for alkali-earth-(like) atoms where the inelastic loss is small.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure

    Exact two-body solutions and Quantum defect theory of two dimensional dipolar quantum gas

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    In this paper, we provide the two-body exact solutions of two dimensional (2D) Schr\"{o}dinger equation with isotropic ±1/r3\pm 1/r^3 interactions. Analytic quantum defect theory are constructed base on these solutions and are applied to investigate the scattering properties as well as two-body bound states of ultracold polar molecules confined in a quasi-2D geometry. Interestingly, we find that for the attractive case, the scattering resonance happens simultaneously in all partial waves which has not been observed in other systems. The effect of this feature on the scattering phase shift across such resonances is also illustrated.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure

    s-Wave Scattering Resonances Induced by Dipolar Interactions of Polar Molecules

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    We show that s-wave scattering resonances induced by dipolar interactions in a polar molecular gas have a universal large and positive effective range, which is very different from Feshbach resonances realized in cold atoms before, where the effective range is either negligible or negative. Such a difference has important consequence in many-body physics. At high temperature regime, a positive effective range gives rise to stronger repulsive interaction energy for positive scattering length, and weaker attractive interaction energy for negative scattering length. While at low-temperatures, we study polaron problem formed by single impurity molecule, and we find that the polaron binding energy increases at the BEC side and decreases at the BCS side. All these effects are in opposite to narrow Feshbach resonances where the effective range is negative.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, published versio

    Assembly Bias of Dwarf-sized Dark Matter Haloes

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    Previous studies indicate that assembly bias effects are stronger for lower mass dark matter haloes. Here we make use of high resolution re-simulations of rich clusters and their surroundings from the Phoenix Project and a large volume cosmological simulation, the Millennium-II run, to quantify assembly bias effects on dwarf-sized dark matter haloes. We find that, in the regions around massive clusters, dwarf-sized haloes ([10^9,10^{11}]\ms) form earlier (Δz∼2\Delta z \sim 2 in redshift) and possess larger VmaxV_{\rm max} (∼20\sim20%) than the field galaxies. We find that this environmental dependence is largely caused by tidal interactions between the ejected haloes and their former hosts, while other large scale effects are less important. Finally we assess the effects of assembly bias on dwarf galaxy formation with a sophisticated semi-analytical galaxy formation model. We find that the dwarf galaxies near massive clusters tend to be redder (Δ(u−r)=0.5\Delta(u-r) = 0.5) and have three times as much stellar mass compared to the field galaxies with the same halo mass. These features should be seen with observational data.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, accepted by MNRA

    Fermion Pairing across a Dipolar Interaction Induced Resonance

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    It is known from the solution of the two-body problem that an anisotropic dipolar interaction can give rise to s-wave scattering resonances, which are named as dipolar interaction induced resonaces (DIIR). In this letter, we study zero-temperature many-body physics of a two-component Fermi gas across a DIIR. In the low-density regime, it is very striking that the resulting pairing order parameter is a nearly isotropic singlet pairing and the physics can be well described by an s-wave resonant interaction potential with finite range corrections, despite of the anisotropic nature of dipolar interaction. The pairing energy is as strong as a unitary Fermi gas nearby a magnetic Feshbach resonance. In the high density regime, the anisotropic effect plays an important role. We find phase transitions from singlet pairing to a state with mixed singlet and triplet pairing, and then from mixed pairing to pure triplet pairing. The state with mixed pairing spontaneously breaks the time-reversal symmetry.Comment: 4.5 pages, 4 figures, figures updated, minor changes in tex
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