2,907 research outputs found

    Superfluid density of states and pseudogap phenomenon in the BCS-BEC crossover regime of a superfluid Fermi gas

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    We investigate single-particle excitations and strong-coupling effects in the BCS-BEC crossover regime of a superfluid Fermi gas. Including phase and amplitude fluctuations of the superfluid order parameter within a TT-matrix theory, we calculate the superfluid density of states (DOS), as well as single-particle spectral weight, over the entire BCS-BEC crossover region below the superfluid transition temperature TcT_{\rm c}. We clarify how the pseudogap in the normal state evolves into the superfluid gap, as one passes through TcT_{\rm c}. While the pseudogap in DOS continuously evolves into the superfluid gap in the weak-coupling BCS regime, the superfluid gap in the crossover region is shown to appear in DOS after the pseudogap disappears below TcT_{\rm c}. In the phase diagram with respect to the temperature and interaction strength, we determine the region where strong pairing fluctuations dominate over single-particle properties of the system. Our results would be useful for the study of strong-coupling phenomena in the BCS-BEC crossover regime of a superfluid Fermi gas.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figure

    Adiabatic Phase Diagram of an Ultracold Atomic Fermi Gas with a Feshbach Resonance

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    We determine the adiabatic phase diagram of a resonantly-coupled system of Fermi atoms and Bose molecules confined in the harmonic trap by using the local density approximation. The adiabatic phase diagram shows the fermionic condensate fraction composed of condensed molecules and Cooper pair atoms. The key idea of our work is conservation of entropy through the adiabatic process, extending the study of Williams et al. [Williams et al., New J. Phys. 6, 123 (2004)] for an ideal gas mixture to include the resonant interaction in a mean-field theory. We also calculate the molecular conversion efficiency as a function of initial temperature. Our work helps to understand recent experiments on the BCS-BEC crossover, in terms of the initial temperature measured before a sweep of the magnetic field.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures. In press, "Journal of the Physical Society of Japan", Vol.76, No.

    Phonon-phason coupling in icosahedral quasicrystals

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    From relaxation simulations of decoration-based quasicrystal structure models using microscopically based interatomic pair potentials, we have calculated the (usually neglected) phonon-phason coupling constant. Its sign is opposite for the two alloys studied, i-AlMn and i-(Al,Cu)Li; a dimensionless measure of its magnitude relative to the phonon and phason elastic constants is of order 1/10, suggesting its effects are small but detectable. We also give a criterion for when phonon-phason effects are noticeable in diffuse tails of Bragg peaks.Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX, uses Europhys Lett macros (included

    Formation of magnetic impurities and pair-breaking effect in a superfluid Fermi gas

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    We theoretically investigate a possible idea to introduce magnetic impurities to a superfluid Fermi gas. In the presence of population imbalance (N↑>N↓N_\uparrow>N_\downarrow, where NσN_\sigma is the number of Fermi atoms with pseudospin σ=↑,↓\sigma=\uparrow,\downarrow), we show that nonmagnetic potential scatterers embedded in the system are magnetized in the sense that some of excess ↑\uparrow-spin atoms are localized around them. They destroy the superfluid order parameter around them, as in the case of magnetic impurity effect discussed in the superconductivity literature. This pair-breaking effect naturally leads to localized excited states below the superfluid excitation gap. To confirm our idea in a simply manner, we treat an attractive Fermi Hubbard model within the mean-field theory at T=0. We self-consistently determine superfluid properties around a nonmagnetic impurity, such as the superfluid order parameter, local population imbalance, as well as single-particle density of states, in the presence of population imbalance. Since the competition between superconductivity and magnetism is one of the most fundamental problems in condensed matter physics, our results would be useful for the study of this important issue in cold Fermi gases.Comment: 27 pages, 14 figure

    Dynamical mean-field equations for strongly interacting fermionic atoms in a potential trap

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    We derive a set of dynamical mean-field equations for strongly interacting fermionic atoms in a potential trap across a Feshbach resonance. Our derivation is based on a variational ansatz, which generalizes the crossover wavefunction to the inhomogeneous case, and the assumption that the order parameter is slowly varying over the size of the Cooper pairs. The equations reduce to a generalized time-dependent Gross-Pitaevskii equation on the BEC side of the resonance. We discuss an iterative method to solve these mean-field equations, and present the solution for a harmonic trap as an illustrating example to self-consistently verify the approximations made in our derivation.Comment: replaced with the published versio

    On the Fulde-Ferrell State in Spatially Isotropic Superconductors

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    Effects of superconducting fluctuations on the Fulde-Ferrell (FF) state are discussed in a spatially isotropic three-dimensional superconductor under a magnetic field. For this system, Shimahara recently showed that within the phenomenological Ginzburg-Landau theory, the long-range order of the FF state is suppressed by the phase fluctuation of the superconducting order parameter. [H. Shimahara: J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. {\bf 67} (1998) 1872, Physica B {\bf 259-261} (1999) 492] In this letter, we investigate this instability of the FF state against superconducting fluctuations from the microscopic viewpoint, employing the theory developed by Nozi\'eres and Schmitt-Rink in the BCS-BEC crossover field. Besides the absence of the second-order phase transition associated with the FF state, we show that even if the pairing interaction is weak, the shift of the chemical potential from the Fermi energy due to the fluctuations is crucial near the critical magnetic field of the FF state obtained within the mean-field theory.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur

    The search for decaying Dark Matter

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    We propose an X-ray mission called Xenia to search for decaying superweakly interacting Dark Matter particles (super-WIMP) with a mass in the keV range. The mission and its observation plan are capable of providing a major break through in our understanding of the nature of Dark Matter (DM). It will confirm, or reject, predictions of a number of particle physics models by increasing the sensitivity of the search for decaying DM by about two orders of magnitude through a wide-field imaging X-ray spectrometer in combination with a dedicated observation program. The proposed mission will provide unique limits on the mixing angle and mass of neutral leptons, right handed partners of neutrinos, which are important Dark Matter candidates. The existence of these particles is strongly motivated by observed neutrino flavor oscillations and the problem of baryon asymmetry of the Universe. In super-WIMP models, the details of the formation of the cosmic web are different from those of LambdaCDM. The proposed mission will, in addition to the search for decaying Dark Matter, provide crucial insight into the nature of DM by studying the structure of the "cosmic web". This will be done by searching for missing baryons in emission, and by using gamma-ray bursts as backlight to observe the warm-hot intergalactic media in absorption.Comment: A white paper submitted in response to the Fundamental Physics Roadmap Advisory Team (FPR-AT) Call for White Paper

    Temperature dependent Eu 3d-4f X-ray Absorption and Resonant Photoemission Study of the Valence Transition in EuNi2(Si0.2Ge0.8)2EuNi_2(Si_{0.2}Ge_{0.8})_2

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    We study the mixed valence transition (TTv_{v} ∼\sim80 K) in EuNi2_{2}(Si0.2_{0.2}Ge0.8_{0.8})2_{2} using Eu 3d−4fd-4f X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) and resonant photoemission spectroscopy (RESPES). The Eu2+^{2+} and Eu3+^{3+} main peaks show a giant resonance and the spectral features match very well with atomic multiplet calculations. The spectra show dramatic temperature (TT)-dependent changes over large energies (∼\sim10 eV) in RESPES and XAS. The observed non-integral mean valencies of ∼\sim2.35 ±\pm 0.03 (TT = 120 K) and ∼\sim2.70 ±\pm 0.03 (TT = 40 K) indicate homogeneous mixed valence above and below TTv_{v}. The redistribution between Eu2+^{2+}4f74f^7+[spd]0[spd]^0 and Eu3+^{3+}4f64f^6+[spd]1[spd]^1 states is attributed to a hybridization change coupled to a Kondo-like volume collapse.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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