148 research outputs found

    Pressure inequalities for nuclear and neutron matter

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    We prove several inequalities using lowest-order effective field theory for nucleons which give an upper bound on the pressure of asymmetric nuclear matter and neutron matter. We prove two types of inequalities, one based on convexity and another derived from shifting an auxiliary field.Comment: 16 pages, published journal version - includes inequalities for spin polarized system

    Breakdown of Hydrodynamics in the Radial Breathing Mode of a Strongly-Interacting Fermi Gas

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    We measure the magnetic field dependence of the frequency and damping time for the radial breathing mode of an optically trapped, Fermi gas of 6^6Li atoms near a Feshbach resonance. The measurements address the apparent discrepancy between the results of Kinast et al., [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 92}, 150402 (2004)] and those of Bartenstein et al., [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 92}, 203201 (2004)]. Over the range of magnetic field from 770 G to 910 G, the measurements confirm the results of Kinast et al. Close to resonance, the measured frequencies are in excellent agreement with predictions for a unitary hydrodynamic gas. At a field of 925 G, the measured frequency begins to decrease below predictions. For fields near 1080 G, we observe a breakdown of hydrodynamic behavior, which is manifested by a sharp increase in frequency and damping rate. The observed breakdown is in qualitative agreement with the sharp transition observed by Bartenstein et al., at 910 G.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 1 table. Revised in response to referees' Comments. Published in PRA(R

    Evidence for Superfluidity in a Resonantly Interacting Fermi Gas

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    We observe collective oscillations of a trapped, degenerate Fermi gas of 6^6Li atoms at a magnetic field just above a Feshbach resonance, where the two-body physics does not support a bound state. The gas exhibits a radial breathing mode at a frequency of 2837(05) Hz, in excellent agreement with the frequency of νH≡10νxνy/3=2830(20)\nu_H\equiv\sqrt{10\nu_x\nu_y/3}=2830(20) Hz predicted for a {\em hydrodynamic} Fermi gas with unitarity limited interactions. The measured damping times and frequencies are inconsistent with predictions for both the collisionless mean field regime and for collisional hydrodynamics. These observations provide the first evidence for superfluid hydrodynamics in a resonantly interacting Fermi gas.Comment: 5 pages, ReVTeX4, 2 eps figs. Resubmitted to PRL in response to referees' comments. Title and abstract changed. Corrected error in Table 1, atom numbers for 0.33 TF and 0.5 TF data were interchanged. Corrected typo in ref 3. Added new figure of damping time versus temperatur

    Collective Excitations of Strongly Interacting Fermi Gases of Atoms in a Harmonic Trap

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    The zero-temperature properties of a dilute two-component Fermi gas in the BCS-BEC crossover are investigated. On the basis of a generalization of the Hylleraas-Undheim method, we construct rigorous upper bounds to the collective frequencies for the radial and the axial breathing mode of the Fermi gas under harmonic confinement in the framework of the hydrodynamic theory. The bounds are compared to experimental data for trapped vapors of Li6 atoms.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure

    Ultrastable CO2 Laser Trapping of Lithium Fermions

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    We demonstrate an ultrastable CO2 laser trap that provides tight confinement of neutral atoms with negligible optical scattering and minimal laser-noise- induced heating. Using this method, fermionic 6Li atoms are stored in a 0.4 mK deep well with a 1/e trap lifetime of 300 sec, consistent with a background pressure of 10^(-11) Torr. To our knowledge, this is the longest storage time ever achieved with an all-optical trap, comparable to the best reported magnetic traps.Comment: 4 pages using REVTeX, 1 eps figur

    Measurement of interaction energy near a Feshbach resonance in a 6Li Fermi gas

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    We investigate the strongly interacting regime in an optically trapped 6^6Li Fermi mixture near a Feshbach resonance. The resonance is found at 800(40)800(40) G in good agreement with theory. Anisotropic expansion of the gas is interpreted by collisional hydrodynamics. We observe an unexpected and large shift (8080 G) between the resonance peak and both the maximum of atom loss and the change of sign of the interaction energy.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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