5,071 research outputs found
Influence of Cooper pairing on the inelastic processes in a gas of Fermi atoms
Correlation properties in ultracold Fermi gas with negative scattering length
and its impact on the three-body recombination is analyzed. We find that Cooper
pairing enhances the recombination rate in contrast to the decrease of this
rate accompanying Bose-Einstein condensation in a Bose gas. This trend is
characteristic for all interval of temperatures T<Tc
Motion of a condensate in a shaken and vibrating harmonic trap
The dynamics of a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) in a time-dependent harmonic
trapping potential is determined for arbitrary variations of the position of
the center of the trap and its frequencies. The dynamics of the BEC wavepacket
is soliton-like. The motion of the center of the wavepacket, and the spatially
and temporally dependent phase (which affects the coherence properties of the
BEC) multiplying the soliton-like part of the wavepacket, are analytically
determined.Comment: Accepted for publication in J. Phys. B: At Mol Opt Phy
Expansion of an interacting Fermi gas
We study the expansion of a dilute ultracold sample of fermions initially
trapped in a anisotropic harmonic trap. The expansion of the cloud provides
valuable information about the state of the system and the role of
interactions. In particular the time evolution of the deformation of the
expanding cloud behaves quite differently depending on whether the system is in
the normal or in the superfluid phase. For the superfluid phase, we predict an
inversion of the deformation of the sample, similarly to what happens with
Bose-Einstein condensates. Viceversa, in the normal phase, the inversion of the
aspect ratio is never achieved, if the mean field interaction is attractive and
collisions are negligible.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, final versio
Measurement of positive and negative scattering lengths in a Fermi gas of atoms
An exotic superfluid phase has been predicted for an ultracold gas of
fermionic atoms. This phase requires strong attractive interactions in the gas,
or correspondingly atoms with a large, negative s-wave scattering length. Here
we report on progress toward realizing this predicted superfluid phase. We
present measurements of both large positive and large negative scattering
lengths in a quantum degenerate Fermi gas of atoms. Starting with a
two-component gas that has been evaporatively cooled to quantum degeneracy, we
create controllable, strong interactions between the atoms using a
magnetic-field Feshbach resonance. We then employ a novel rf spectroscopy
technique to directly measure the mean-field interaction energy, which is
proportional to the s-wave scattering length. Near the peak of the resonance we
observe a saturation of the interaction energy; it is in this strongly
interacting regime that superfluidity is predicted to occur. We have also
observed anisotropic expansion of the gas, which has recently been suggested as
a signature of superfluidity. However, we find that this can be attributed to a
purely collisional effect
Bound states of three and four resonantly interacting particles
We present an exact diagrammatic approach for the problem of dimer-dimer
scattering in 3D for dimers being a resonant bound state of two fermions in a
spin-singlet state, with corresponding scattering length . Applying this
approach to the calculation of the dimer-dimer scattering length , we
recover exactly the already known result . We use the developed
approach to obtain new results in 2D for fermions as well as for bosons.
Namely, we calculate bound state energies for three and four
resonantly interacting bosons in 2D. For the case of resonant interaction
between fermions and bosons we calculate exactly bound state energies of the
following complexes: two bosons plus one fermion , two bosons plus two
fermions , and three bosons plus one fermion
.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
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