8 research outputs found
The effects of trap-confinement and interatomic interactions on Josephson effects and macroscopic quantum self-trapping for a Bose-Einstein Condensate
We theoretically study the effects of trap-confinement and interatomic
interactions on Josephson oscillations (JO) and macroscopic quantum
self-trapping (MQST) for a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) confined in a trap
which has a symmetric double-well (DW) potential along z-axis and 2D harmonic
potentials along x- and y-axis. We consider three types of model interaction
potentials: contact, long-range dipolar and finite-range potentials. Our
results show that by changing the aspect ratio between the axial and radial
trap sizes, one can induce a transition from JO to MQST for contact
interactions with a small scattering length. For long-range dipolar interatomic
interactions, we analyze transition from Rabi to Josephson regime and Josephson
to MQST regime by changing the aspect ratio of the trap for a particular
dipolar orientation. For a finite-range interaction, we study the effects of
relatively large scattering length and effective range on JO and MQST. We show
that JO and MQST are possible even if scattering length is relatively large,
particularly near a narrow Feshbach resonance due to the finite-range effects