2,203 research outputs found
Boson induced s-wave pairing in dilute boson-fermion mixtures
We show that in dilute boson-fermion mixtures with fermions in two internal
states, even when the bare fermion-fermion interaction is repulsive, the
exchange of density fluctuations of the Bose condensate may lead to an
effective fermion-fermion attraction, and thus to a Cooper instability in the
s-wave channel. We give an analytical method to derive the associated in
the limit where the phonon branch of the Bogoliubov excitation spectrum of the
bosons is important. We find a of the same order as for a pure Fermi gas
with bare attraction.Comment: 12 pages, no figure
Two-species magneto-optical trap with 40K and 87Rb
We trap and cool a gas composed of 40K and 87Rb, using a two-species
magneto-optical trap (MOT). This trap represents the first step towards cooling
the Bose-Fermi mixture to quantum degeneracy. Laser light for the MOT is
derived from laser diodes and amplified with a single high power semiconductor
amplifier chip. The four-color laser system is described, and the
single-species and two-species MOTs are characterized. Atom numbers of 1x10^7
40K and 2x10^9 87Rb are trapped in the two-species MOT. Observation of trap
loss due to collisions between species is presented and future prospects for
the experiment are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in Physical Review
Temperature dependence of density profiles for a cloud of non-interacting fermions moving inside a harmonic trap in one dimension
We extend to finite temperature a Green's function method that was previously
proposed to evaluate ground-state properties of mesoscopic clouds of
non-interacting fermions moving under harmonic confinement in one dimension. By
calculations of the particle and kinetic energy density profiles we illustrate
the role of thermal excitations in smoothing out the quantum shell structure of
the cloud and in spreading the particle spill-out from quantum tunnel at the
edges. We also discuss the approach of the exact density profiles to the
predictions of a semiclassical model often used in the theory of confined
atomic gases at finite temperature.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Fast Monte Carlo Simulation for Patient-specific CT/CBCT Imaging Dose Calculation
Recently, X-ray imaging dose from computed tomography (CT) or cone beam CT
(CBCT) scans has become a serious concern. Patient-specific imaging dose
calculation has been proposed for the purpose of dose management. While Monte
Carlo (MC) dose calculation can be quite accurate for this purpose, it suffers
from low computational efficiency. In response to this problem, we have
successfully developed a MC dose calculation package, gCTD, on GPU architecture
under the NVIDIA CUDA platform for fast and accurate estimation of the x-ray
imaging dose received by a patient during a CT or CBCT scan. Techniques have
been developed particularly for the GPU architecture to achieve high
computational efficiency. Dose calculations using CBCT scanning geometry in a
homogeneous water phantom and a heterogeneous Zubal head phantom have shown
good agreement between gCTD and EGSnrc, indicating the accuracy of our code. In
terms of improved efficiency, it is found that gCTD attains a speed-up of ~400
times in the homogeneous water phantom and ~76.6 times in the Zubal phantom
compared to EGSnrc. As for absolute computation time, imaging dose calculation
for the Zubal phantom can be accomplished in ~17 sec with the average relative
standard deviation of 0.4%. Though our gCTD code has been developed and tested
in the context of CBCT scans, with simple modification of geometry it can be
used for assessing imaging dose in CT scans as well.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, and 1 tabl
Three-Fluid Description of the Sympathetic Cooling of a Boson-Fermion Mixture
We present a model for sympathetic cooling of a mixture of fermionic and
bosonic atomic gases in harmonic traps, based on a three-fluid description. The
model confirms the experimentally observed cooling limit of about 0.2 T_F when
only bosons are pumped. We propose sequential cooling -- first pumping of
bosons and afterwards fermions -- as a way to obtain lower temperatures. For
this scheme, our model predicts that temperatures less than 0.1 T_F can be
reached.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Spin Excitations in a Fermi Gas of Atoms
We have experimentally investigated a spin excitation in a quantum degenerate
Fermi gas of atoms. In the hydrodynamic regime the damping time of the
collective excitation is used to probe the quantum behavior of the gas. At
temperatures below the Fermi temperature we measure up to a factor of 2
reduction in the excitation damping time. In addition we observe a strong
excitation energy dependence for this quantum statistical effect.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Low energy collective excitations in a superfluid trapped Fermi gas
We study low energy collective excitations in a trapped superfluid Fermi gas,
that describe slow variations of the phase of the superfluid order parameter.
Well below the critical temperature the corresponding eigenfrequencies turn out
to be of the order of the trap frequency, and these modes manifest themselves
as the eigenmodes of the density fluctuations of the gas sample. The latter
could provide an experimental evidence of the presence of the superfluid phase.Comment: 5 pages, REVTeX, referencies correcte
Resonant control of elastic collisions in an optically trapped Fermi gas of atoms
We have loaded an ultracold gas of fermionic atoms into a far off resonance
optical dipole trap and precisely controlled the spin composition of the
trapped gas. We have measured a magnetic-field Feshbach resonance between atoms
in the two lowest energy spin-states, |9/2, -9/2> and |9/2, -7/2>. The
resonance peaks at a magnetic field of 201.5 plus or minus 1.4 G and has a
width of 8.0 plus or minus 1.1 G. Using this resonance we have changed the
elastic collision cross section in the gas by nearly 3 orders of magnitude.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Pauli Blocking of Collisions in a Quantum Degenerate Atomic Fermi Gas
We have produced an interacting quantum degenerate Fermi gas of atoms
composed of two spin-states of magnetically trapped K. The relative
Fermi energies are adjusted by controlling the population in each spin-state.
Measurements of the thermodynamics reveal the resulting imbalance in the mean
energy per particle between the two species, which is as large as a factor of
1.4 at our lowest temperature. This imbalance of energy comes from a
suppression of collisions between atoms in the gas due to the Pauli exclusion
principle. Through measurements of the thermal relaxation rate we have directly
observed this Pauli blocking as a factor of two reduction in the effective
collision cross-section in the quantum degenerate regime.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Observation of p-wave Threshold Law Using Evaporatively Cooled Fermionic Atoms
We have measured independently both s-wave and p-wave cross-dimensional
thermalization rates for ultracold potassium-40 atoms held in a magnetic trap.
These measurements reveal that this fermionic isotope has a large positive
s-wave triplet scattering length in addition to a low temperature p-wave shape
resonance. We have observed directly the p-wave threshold law which, combined
with the Fermi statistics, dramatically suppresses elastic collision rates at
low temperatures. In addition, we present initial evaporative cooling results
that make possible these collision measurements and are a precursor to
achieving quantum degeneracy in this neutral, low-density Fermi system.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
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