259 research outputs found
Three-body problem in a two-dimensional Fermi gas
We investigate the three-body properties of two identical "up" fermions and
one distinguishable "down" atom interacting in a strongly confined
two-dimensional geometry. We compute exactly the atom-dimer scattering
properties and the three-body recombination rate as a function of collision
energy and mass ratio m_up/m_down. We find that the recombination rate for
fermions is strongly energy dependent, with significant contributions from
higher partial waves at low energies. For m_up < m_down, the s-wave atom-dimer
scattering below threshold is completely described by the scattering length.
Furthermore, we examine the "up-up-down" bound states (trimers) appearing at
large m_up/m_down and find that the energy spectrum for the deepest bound
trimers resembles that of a hydrogen atom confined to two dimensions.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
SU(N) Fermions in a One-Dimensional Harmonic Trap
We conduct a theoretical study of SU(N) fermions confined by a
one-dimensional harmonic potential. Firstly, we introduce a new numerical
approach for solving the trapped interacting few-body problem, by which one may
obtain accurate energy spectra across the full range of interaction strengths.
In the strong-coupling limit, we map the SU(N) Hamiltonian to a spin-chain
model. We then show that an existing, extremely accurate ansatz - derived for a
Heisenberg SU(2) spin chain - is extendable to these N-component systems.
Lastly, we consider balanced SU(N) Fermi gases that have an equal number of
particles in each spin state for N=2, 3, 4. In the weak- and strong-coupling
regimes, we find that the ground-state energies rapidly converge to their
expected values in the thermodynamic limit with increasing atom number. This
suggests that the many-body energetics of N-component fermions may be
accurately inferred from the corresponding few-body systems of N
distinguishable particles.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
Atom-dimer and dimer-dimer scattering in fermionic mixtures near a narrow Feshbach resonance
We develop a diagrammatic approach for solving few-body problems in
heteronuclear fermionic mixtures near a narrow interspecies Feshbach resonance.
We calculate s-, p-, and d-wave phaseshifts for the scattering of an atom by a
weakly-bound dimer. The fermionic statistics of atoms and the composite nature
of the dimer lead to a strong angular momentum dependence of the atom-dimer
interaction, which manifests itself in a peculiar interference of the scattered
s- and p-waves. This effect strengthens with the mass ratio and is remarkably
pronounced in 40K-(40K-6Li) atom-dimer collisions. We calculate the scattering
length for two dimers formed near a narrow interspecies resonance. Finally, we
discuss the collisional relaxation of the dimers to deeply bound states and
evaluate the corresponding rate constant as a function of the detuning and
collision energy.Comment: 16 pages, 21 figures. Submitted to EPJD, EuroQUAM special issue "Cold
Quantum Matter - Achievements and Prospects
Atom-dimer scattering and long-lived trimers in fermionic mixtures
We consider a heteronuclear fermionic mixture on the molecular side of an
interspecies Feshbach resonance and discuss atom-dimer scattering properties in
uniform space and in the presence of an external confining potential,
restricting the system to a quasi-2D geometry. We find that there is a peculiar
atom-dimer p-wave resonance which can be tuned by changing the frequency of the
confinement. Our results have implications for the ongoing experiments on
Lithium-Potassium mixtures, where this mechanism allows for switching the
p-wave interaction between a K atom and Li-K dimer from attractive to
repulsive, and forming a weakly bound trimer with unit angular momentum. We
show that such trimers are long-lived and the atom-dimer resonance does not
enhance inelastic relaxation in the mixture, making it an outstanding candidate
for studies of p-wave resonance effects in a many-body system.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, published versio
Finite-temperature behavior of the Bose polaron
We consider a mobile impurity immersed in a Bose gas at finite temperature.
Using perturbation theory valid for weak coupling between the impurity and the
bosons, we derive analytical results for the energy and damping of the impurity
for low and high temperatures, as well as for temperatures close to the
critical temperature for Bose-Einstein condensation. These results show
that the properties of the impurity vary strongly with temperature. In
particular, the energy exhibits a non-monotonic behavior close to , and
the damping rises sharply close to . We argue that this behaviour is
generic for impurities immersed in an environment undergoing a phase transition
that breaks a continuous symmetry. Finally, we discuss how these effects can be
detected experimentally.Comment: 10 pages and 6 figure
Strong-coupling ansatz for the one-dimensional Fermi gas in a harmonic potential
A major challenge in modern physics is to accurately describe strongly interacting quantum many-body systems. One-dimensional systems provide fundamental insights since they are often amenable to exact methods. However, no exact solution is known for the experimentally relevant case of external confinement. Here, we propose a powerful ansatz for the one-dimensional Fermi gas in a harmonic potential near the limit of infinite short-range repulsion. For the case of a single impurity in a Fermi sea, we show that our ansatz is indistinguishable from numerically exact results in both the few- and many-body limits. We furthermore derive an effective Heisenberg spin-chain model corresponding to our ansatz, valid for any spin-mixture, within which we obtain the impurity eigenstates analytically. In particular, the classical Pascal's triangle emerges in the expression for the ground-state wavefunction. As well as providing an important benchmark for strongly correlated physics, our results are relevant for emerging quantum technologies, where a precise knowledge of one-dimensional quantum states is paramount
Strongly-resonant p-wave superfluids
We study theoretically a dilute gas of identical fermions interacting via a
p-wave resonance. We show that, depending on the microscopic physics, there are
two distinct regimes of p-wave resonant superfluids, which we term "weak" and
"strong". Although expected naively to form a BCS-BEC superfluid, a
strongly-resonant p-wave superfluid is in fact unstable towards the formation
of a gas of fermionic triplets. We examine this instability and estimate the
lifetime of the p-wave molecules due to the collisional relaxation into
triplets. We discuss consequences for the experimental achievement of p-wave
superfluids in both weakly- and strongly-resonant regimes
Bound states in a quasi-two-dimensional Fermi gas
We consider the problem of N identical fermions of mass M and one
distinguishable particle of mass m interacting via short-range interactions in
a confined quasi-two-dimensional (quasi-2D) geometry. For N=2 and mass ratios
M/m<13.6, we find non-Efimov trimers that smoothly evolve from 2D to 3D. In the
limit of strong 2D confinement, we show that the energy of the N+1 system can
be approximated by an effective two-channel model. We use this approximation to
solve the 3+1 problem and we find that a bound tetramer can exist for mass
ratios M/m as low as 5 for strong confinement, thus providing the first example
of a universal, non-Efimov tetramer involving three identical fermions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Observation of an orbital interaction-induced Feshbach resonance in 173-Yb
We report on the experimental observation of a novel inter-orbital Feshbach
resonance in ultracold 173-Yb atoms, which opens the possibility of tuning the
interactions between the 1S0 and 3P0 metastable state, both possessing
vanishing total electronic angular momentum. The resonance is observed at
experimentally accessible magnetic field strengths and occurs universally for
all hyperfine state combinations. We characterize the resonance in the bulk via
inter-orbital cross-thermalization as well as in a three-dimensional lattice
using high-resolution clock-line spectroscopy.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
- …