266 research outputs found
Atom-Dimer Scattering in a Three-Component Fermi Gas
Ultracold gases of three distinguishable particles with large scattering
lengths are expected to show rich few-body physics related to the Efimov
effect. We have created three different mixtures of ultracold 6Li atoms and
weakly bound 6Li2 dimers consisting of atoms in three different hyperfine
states and studied their inelastic decay via atom-dimer collisions. We have
found resonant enhancement of the decay due to the crossing of Efimov-like
trimer states with the atom-dimer continuum in one mixture as well as minima of
the decay in another mixture, which we interpret as a suppression of exchange
reactions of the type |12>+|3> -> |23>+|1>. Such a suppression is caused by
interference between different decay paths and demonstrates the possiblity to
use Efimov physics to control the rate constants for molecular exchange
reactions in the ultracold regime.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Truncated-Determinant Diagrammatic Monte Carlo for Fermions with Contact Interaction
For some models of interacting fermions the known solution to the notorious
sign-problem in Monte Carlo (MC) simulations is to work with macroscopic
fermionic determinants; the price, however, is a macroscopic scaling of the
numerical effort spent on elementary local updates. We find that the {\it
ratio} of two macroscopic determinants can be found with any desired accuracy
by considering truncated (local in space and time) matices. In this respect, MC
for interacting fermionic systems becomes similar to that for the
sign-problem-free bosonic systems with system-size independent update cost. We
demonstrate the utility of the truncated-determinant method by simulating the
attractive Hubbard model within the MC scheme based on partially summed Feynman
diagrams. We conjecture that similar approach may be useful in other
implementations of the sign-free determinant schemes.Comment: results of the actual Hubbard model simulations are adde
Efficient and robust initialization of a qubit register with fermionic atoms
We show that fermionic atoms have crucial advantages over bosonic atoms in
terms of loading in optical lattices for use as a possible quantum computation
device. After analyzing the change in the level structure of a non-uniform
confining potential as a periodic potential is superimposed to it, we show how
this structure combined with the Pauli principle and fermion degeneracy can be
exploited to create unit occupancy of the lattice sites with very high
efficiency.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Endpoint thermodynamics of an atomic Fermi gas subject to a Feshbach resonance
The entropy and kinetic, potential, and interaction energies of an atomic
Fermi gas in a trap are studied under the assumption of thermal equilibrium for
finite temperature. A Feshbach resonance can cause the fermions to pair into
diatomic molecules. The entropy and energies of mixtures of such molecules with
unpaired atoms are calculated, in relation to recent experiments on molecular
Bose-Einstein condensates produced in this manner. It is shown that, starting
with a Fermi gas of temperature , where is the
non-interacting Fermi temperature, an extremely cold degenerate Fermi gas of
temperature may be produced without further evaporative
cooling. This requires adiabatic passage of the resonance, subsequent sudden
removal of unpaired atoms, and adiabatic return. We also calculate the ratio of
the interaction energy to the kinetic energy, a straightforward experimental
signal which may be used to determine the temperature of the atoms and indicate
condensation of the molecules.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Pure Gas of Optically Trapped Molecules Created from Fermionic Atoms
We report on the production of a pure sample of up to 3x10^5 optically
trapped molecules from a Fermi gas of 6Li atoms. The dimers are formed by
three-body recombination near a Feshbach resonance. For purification a
Stern-Gerlach selection technique is used that efficiently removes all trapped
atoms from the atom-molecule mixture. The behavior of the purified molecular
sample shows a striking dependence on the applied magnetic field. For very
weakly bound molecules near the Feshbach resonance, the gas exhibits a
remarkable stability with respect to collisional decay.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Carrier-envelope phase control over pathway interference in strong-field dissociation of H
The dissociation of an H molecular-ion beam by linearly polarized,
carrier-envelope-phase-tagged 5 fs pulses at 4W/cm with a
central wavelength of 730 nm was studied using a coincidence 3D momentum
imaging technique. Carrier-envelope-phase-dependent asymmetries in the emission
direction of H fragments relative to the laser polarization were observed.
These asymmetries are caused by interference of odd and even photon number
pathways, where net-zero photon and 1-photon interference predominantly
contributes at H+H kinetic energy releases of 0.2 -- 0.45 eV, and
net-2-photon and 1-photon interference contributes at 1.65 -- 1.9 eV. These
measurements of the benchmark H molecule offer the distinct advantage
that they can be quantitatively compared with \textit{ab initio} theory to
confirm our understanding of strong-field coherent control via the
carrier-envelope phase
Three-body problem in Fermi gases with short-range interparticle interaction
We discuss 3-body processes in ultracold two-component Fermi gases with
short-range intercomponent interaction characterized by a large and positive
scattering length . It is found that in most cases the probability of 3-body
recombination is a universal function of the mass ratio and , and is
independent of short-range physics. We also calculate the scattering length
corresponding to the atom-dimer interaction.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Note: Position dependence of time signals picked off a microchannel plate detector
Citation: Ablikim, U., Zohrabi, M., Jochim, B., Berry, B., Severt, T., Carnes, K. D., & Ben-Itzhak, I. (2015). Note: Position dependence of time signals picked off a microchannel plate detector. Review of Scientific Instruments, 86(1), 3. doi:10.1063/1.4906327Using an ultrafast laser and a precision mask, we demonstrate that time signals picked off directly from a microchannel plate detector depend on the position of the hit. This causes a time spread of about 280 ps, which can affect the quality of imaging measurements using large detectors. (C) 2015 AIP Publishing LLC
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