4 research outputs found
Few-body physics with ultracold atomic and molecular systems in traps
Few-body physics has played a prominent role in atomic, molecular and nuclear
physics since the early days of quantum mechanics. It is now possible---thanks
to tremendous progress in cooling, trapping, and manipulating ultracold
samples---to experimentally study few-body phenomena in trapped atomic and
molecular systems with unprecedented control. This review summarizes recent
studies of few-body phenomena in trapped atomic and molecular gases, with an
emphasis on small trapped systems. We start by introducing the free-space
scattering properties and then investigate what happens when two particles,
bosons or fermions, are placed in an external confinement. Next, various
three-body systems are treated analytically in limiting cases. Our current
understanding of larger two-component Fermi systems and Bose systems is
reviewed, and connections with the corresponding bulk systems are established.
Lastly, future prospects and challenges are discussed. Throughout this review,
commonalities with other systems such as nuclei or quantum dots are
highlighted.Comment: review article to be published in Rep. Prog. Phys. (66 pages, 21
figures
Strongly Correlated Quantum Fluids: Ultracold Quantum Gases, Quantum Chromodynamic Plasmas, and Holographic Duality
Strongly correlated quantum fluids are phases of matter that are
intrinsically quantum mechanical, and that do not have a simple description in
terms of weakly interacting quasi-particles. Two systems that have recently
attracted a great deal of interest are the quark-gluon plasma, a plasma of
strongly interacting quarks and gluons produced in relativistic heavy ion
collisions, and ultracold atomic Fermi gases, very dilute clouds of atomic
gases confined in optical or magnetic traps. These systems differ by more than
20 orders of magnitude in temperature, but they were shown to exhibit very
similar hydrodynamic flow. In particular, both fluids exhibit a robustly low
shear viscosity to entropy density ratio which is characteristic of quantum
fluids described by holographic duality, a mapping from strongly correlated
quantum field theories to weakly curved higher dimensional classical gravity.
This review explores the connection between these fields, and it also serves as
an introduction to the Focus Issue of New Journal of Physics on Strongly
Correlated Quantum Fluids: from Ultracold Quantum Gases to QCD Plasmas. The
presentation is made accessible to the general physics reader and includes
discussions of the latest research developments in all three areas.Comment: 138 pages, 25 figures, review associated with New Journal of Physics
special issue "Focus on Strongly Correlated Quantum Fluids: from Ultracold
Quantum Gases to QCD Plasmas"
(http://iopscience.iop.org/1367-2630/focus/Focus%20on%20Strongly%20Correlated%20Quantum%20Fluids%20-%20from%20Ultracold%20Quantum%20Gases%20to%20QCD%20Plasmas