326 research outputs found
Two-body relaxation of spin-polarized fermions in reduced dimensionalities near a p-wave Feshbach resonance
We study inelastic two-body relaxation in a spin-polarized ultracold Fermi
gas in the presence of a p-wave Feshbach resonance. It is shown that in reduced
dimensionalities, especially in the quasi-one-dimensional case, the enhancement
of the inelastic rate constant on approach to the resonance is strongly
suppressed compared to three dimensions. This may open promising paths for
obtaining novel many-body states.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figure
Two-dimensional dipolar Bose gas with the roton-maxon excitation spectrum
We discuss fluctuations in a dilute two-dimensional Bose-condensed dipolar
gas, which has a roton-maxon character of the excitation spectrum. We calculate
the density-density correlation function, fluctuation corrections to the
chemical potential, compressibility, and the normal (superfluid) fraction. It
is shown that the presence of the roton strongly enhances fluctuations of the
density, and we establish the validity criterion of the Bogoliubov approach. At
T=0 the condensate depletion becomes significant if the roton minimum is
sufficiently close to zero. At finite temperatures exceeding the roton energy,
the effect of thermal fluctuations is stronger and it may lead to a large
normal fraction of the gas and compressibility.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Delocalization of weakly interacting bosons in a 1D quasiperiodic potential
We consider weakly interacting bosons in a 1D quasiperiodic potential
(Aubry-Azbel-Harper model) in the regime where all single-particle states are
localized. We show that the interparticle interaction may lead to the many-body
delocalization and we obtain the finite-temperature phase diagram.
Counterintuitively, in a wide range of parameters the delocalization requires
stronger cou- pling as the temperature increases. This means that the system of
bosons can undergo a transition from a fluid to insulator (glass) state under
heating
Superfluidity of identical fermions in an optical lattice: atoms and polar molecules
In this work, we discuss the emergence of -wave superfluids of identical
fermions in 2D lattices. The optical lattice potential manifests itself in an
interplay between an increase in the density of states on the Fermi surface and
the modification of the fermion-fermion interaction (scattering) amplitude. The
density of states is enhanced due to an increase of the effective mass of
atoms. In deep lattices, for short-range interacting atoms, the scattering
amplitude is strongly reduced compared to free space due to a small overlap of
wavefunctions of fermions sitting in the neighboring lattice sites, which
suppresses the -wave superfluidity. However, we show that for a moderate
lattice depth there is still a possibility to create atomic -wave
superfluids with sizable transition temperatures. The situation is drastically
different for fermionic polar molecules. Being dressed with a microwave field,
they acquire a dipole-dipole attractive tail in the interaction potential.
Then, due to a long-range character of the dipole-dipole interaction, the
effect of the suppression of the scattering amplitude in 2D lattices is absent.
This leads to the emergence of a stable topological superfluid of
identical microwave-dressed polar molecules.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures; prepared for proceedings of the IV International
Conference on Quantum Technologies (Moscow, July 12-16, 2017); the present
paper summarizes the results of our studies arXiv:1601.03026 and
arXiv:1701.0852
Achieving a BCS transition in an atomic Fermi gas
We consider a gas of cold fermionic atoms having two spin components with
interactions characterized by their s-wave scattering length . At positive
scattering length the atoms form weakly bound bosonic molecules which can be
evaporatively cooled to undergo Bose-Einstein condensation, whereas at negative
scattering length BCS pairing can take place. It is shown that, by
adiabatically tuning the scattering length from positive to negative
values, one may transform the molecular Bose-Einstein condensate into a highly
degenerate atomic Fermi gas, with the ratio of temperature to Fermi temperature
. The corresponding critical final value of
which leads to the BCS transition is found to be about one half, where is
the Fermi momentum.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure. Phys. Rev. Lett. in pres
One-dimensional two-component fermions with contact even-wave repulsion and SU(2) breaking near-resonant odd-wave attraction
We consider a one-dimensional (1D) two-component atomic Fermi gas with
contact interaction in the even-wave channel (Yang-Gaudin model) and study the
effect of an SU(2) symmetry breaking near-resonant odd-wave interaction within
one of the components. Starting from the microscopic Hamiltonian, we derive an
effective field theory for the spin degrees of freedom using the bosonization
technique. It is shown that at a critical value of the odd-wave interaction
there is a first-order phase transition from a phase with zero total spin and
zero magnetization to the spin-segregated phase where the magnetization locally
differs from zero.Comment: 18 pages, 3 fugures; references adde
Collapse and Bose-Einstein condensation in a trapped Bose-gas with negative scattering length
We find that the key features of the evolution and collapse of a trapped Bose
condensate with negative scattering length are predetermined by the particle
flux from the above-condensate cloud to the condensate and by 3-body
recombination of Bose-condensed atoms. The collapse, starting once the number
of Bose-condensed atoms reaches the critical value, ceases and turns to
expansion when the density of the collapsing cloud becomes so high that the
recombination losses dominate over attractive interparticle interaction. As a
result, we obtain a sequence of collapses, each of them followed by dynamic
oscillations of the condensate. In every collapse the 3-body recombination
burns only a part of the condensate, and the number of Bose-condensed atoms
always remains finite. However, it can comparatively slowly decrease after the
collapse, due to the transfer of the condensate particles to the
above-condensate cloud in the course of damping of the condensate oscillations.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Finite size effects for the gap in the excitation spectrum of the one-dimensional Hubbard model
We study finite size effects for the gap of the quasiparticle excitation
spectrum in the weakly interacting regime one-dimensional Hubbard model with
on-site attraction. Two type of corrections to the result of the thermodynamic
limit are obtained. Aside from a power law (conformal) correction due to
gapless excitations which behaves as , where is the number of
lattice sites, we obtain corrections related to the existence of gapped
excitations. First of all, there is an exponential correction which in the
weakly interacting regime () behaves as in the extreme limit of ,
where is the hopping amplitude, is the on-site energy, and
is the gap in the thermodynamic limit. Second, in a finite
size system a spin-flip producing unpaired fermions leads to the appearance of
solitons with non-zero momenta, which provides an extra (non-exponential)
contribution . For moderate but still large values of
, these corrections significantly increase and may
become comparable with the conformal correction. Moreover, in the case
of weak interactions where , the exponential correction
exceeds higher order power law corrections in a wide range of parameters,
namely for , and so does
even in a wider range of . For sufficiently small number of particles,
which can be of the order of thousands in the weakly interacting regime, the
gap is fully dominated by finite size effects.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figure
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