634 research outputs found
Time-Dependent Density-Functional Theory for Superfluids
A density-functional theory is established for inhomogeneous superfluids at
finite temperature, subject to time-dependent external fields in isothermal
conditions. After outlining parallelisms between a neutral superfluid and a
charged superconductor, Hohenberg-Kohn-Sham-type theorems are proved for
gauge-invariant densities and a set of Bogolubov-Popov equations including
exchange and correlation is set up. Earlier results applying in the linear
response regime are recovered.Comment: 12 pages. Europhysics Letters, in pres
Collective excitations of a periodic Bose condensate in the Wannier representation
We study the dispersion relation of the excitations of a dilute Bose-Einstein
condensate confined in a periodic optical potential and its Bloch oscillations
in an accelerated frame. The problem is reduced to one-dimensionality through a
renormalization of the s-wave scattering length and the solution of the
Bogolubov - de Gennes equations is formulated in terms of the appropriate
Wannier functions. Some exact properties of a periodic one-dimensional
condensate are easily demonstrated: (i) the lowest band at positive energy
refers to phase modulations of the condensate and has a linear dispersion
relation near the Brillouin zone centre; (ii) the higher bands arise from the
superposition of localized excitations with definite phase relationships; and
(iii) the wavenumber-dependent current under a constant force in the
semiclassical transport regime vanishes at the zone boundaries. Early results
by J. C. Slater [Phys. Rev. 87, 807 (1952)] on a soluble problem in electron
energy bands are used to specify the conditions under which the Wannier
functions may be approximated by on-site tight-binding orbitals of harmonic-
oscillator form. In this approximation the connections between the low-lying
excitations in a lattice and those in a harmonic well are easily visualized.
Analytic results are obtained in the tight-binding scheme and are illustrated
with simple numerical calculations for the dispersion relation and
semiclassical transport in the lowest energy band, at values of the system
parameters which are relevant to experiment.Comment: 20 pages, 2 figures, 22 reference
An interview with Marisa Michelini: IUPAP-ICPE medal, professor of physicseducation research at Udine University, GIREP President
The present interview was conceived and realized for the occasion of the first 45 years of endless Physics Education Research activity of Professor Marisa Michelini, a lifetime dedicated to innovate teaching and learning environments to all degrees of instruction, and to design institutional architectures, where rooting these innovations. The interview structure is inspired to the nature of scientific thinking, i.e. inducing more general understanding from concrete observations, in two manners. First, the interview focuses on (ten) topics drawing from three box-cases about physics education research and teachers education in scientific areas: innovations in teaching/learning environments; theoretical and methodological frameworks; and strategies and tools for institutional cooperation between schools and governing bodies to urge policy making. Each topic is introduced by observations, from which the interview questions are induced. Second, each question draws from Marisa Michelini’s contributions, to touch core topics at the heart of science education, science and society
Local-Field Theory of the BCS-BEC Crossover
We develop a self-consistent theory unifying the description of a quantum Fermi gas in the presence of a Fano-Feshbach resonance in the whole phase diagram ranging from BCS to BEC type of superfluidity and from narrow to broad resonances, including the fluctuations beyond mean field. Our theory covers a part of the phase diagram which is not easily accessible by Quantum Monte Carlo simulations and is becoming interesting for a new class of experiments in cold atoms
Non-destructive cavity QED probe of Bloch oscillations in a gas of ultracold atoms
We describe a scheme for probing a gas of ultracold atoms trapped in an
optical lattice and moving in the presence of an external potential. The probe
is non-destructive and uses the existing lattice fields as the measurement
device. Two counter-propagating cavity fields simultaneously set up a
conservative lattice potential and a weak quantum probe of the atomic motion.
Balanced heterodyne detection of the probe field at the cavity output along
with integration in time and across the atomic cloud yield information about
the atomic dynamics in a single run. The scheme is applied to a measurement of
the Bloch oscillation frequency for atoms moving in the presence of the local
gravitational potential. Signal-to-noise ratios are estimated to be as high as
.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Interaction-range effects and universality in the BCS-BEC crossover of spin-orbit-coupled Fermi gases
We explore the evolution of an ultracold quantum gas of interacting fermions crossing from a Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) superfluidity to a Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) of molecular bosons in the presence of a tunable-range interaction among the fermions and of an artificial magnetic field, which can be used to simulate a pseudo-spin-orbit coupling (SOC) and to produce topological states. We find that the crossover is affected by a competition between the finite range of the interaction and the SOC and that the threshold λB for the topological transition is affected by the interactions only in the small pair size, BEC-like, regime. Below λB, we find persistence of universal behavior in the critical temperature, chemical potential, and condensate fraction, provided that the pair correlation length is used as a driving parameter. Above threshold, universality is lost in the regime of large pair sizes. Here, the limiting ground state departs from a weakly interacting BCS-like one so that a different description is required. Our results can be relevant in view of current experiments with cold atoms in optical cavities, where tunable-range effective atomic interactions can be engineered
Probing the energy bands of a Bose-Einstein condensate in an optical lattice
We simulate three experimental methods which could be realized in the
laboratory to probe the band excitation energies and the momentum distribution
of a Bose-Einstein condensate inside an optical lattice. The values of the
excitation energies obtained in these different methods agree within the
accuracy of the simulation. The meaning of the results in terms of density and
phase deformations is tested by studying the relaxation of a phase-modulated
condensate towards the ground state.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Superfluid and Dissipative Dynamics of a Bose-Einstein Condensate in a Periodic Optical Potential
We create Bose-Einstein condensates of 87-rubidium in a static magnetic trap
with a superimposed blue-detuned 1D optical lattice. By displacing the magnetic
trap center we are able to control the condensate evolution. We observe a
change in the frequency of the center-of-mass oscillation in the harmonic
trapping potential, in analogy with an increase in effective mass. For fluid
velocities greater than a local speed of sound, we observe the onset of
dissipative processes up to full removal of the superfluid component. A
parallel simulation study visualizes the dynamics of the BEC and accounts for
the main features of the observed behavior.Comment: 4 pages, including figure
The Nature of Superfluidity in Ultracold Fermi Gases Near Feshbach Resonances
We study the superfluid state of atomic Fermi gases using a BCS-BEC crossover
theory. Our approach emphasizes non-condensed fermion pairs which strongly
hybridize with their (Feshbach-induced) molecular boson counterparts. These
pairs lead to pseudogap effects above and non-BCS characteristics below.
We discuss how these effects influence the experimental signatures of
superfluidity.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PRA Rapid Communications;
introduction rewritten, figure replace
Dynamical localization of matter wave solitons in managed barrier potentials
The bright matter wave soliton propagation through a barrier with a rapidly
oscillating position is investigated. The averaged over rapid oscillations
Gross-Pitaevskii (GP) equation is derived. It is shown that the soliton is
dynamically trapped by the effective double-barrier.
The analytical predictions for the soliton effective dynamics is confirmed by
the numerical simulations of the full GP equation.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
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