2,795 research outputs found
BCS-BEC crossover in a random external potential
We investigate the ground state properties of a disordered superfluid Fermi
gas across the BCS-BEC (Bose Einstein condensate) crossover. We show that, for
weak disorder, both the depletion of the condensate fraction of pairs and the
normal fluid density exhibit a nonmonotonic behavior as a function of the
interaction parameter , reaching their minimum value near unitarity. We
find that, moving away from the weak coupling BCS regime, Anderson's theorem
ceases to apply and the superfluid order parameter is more and more affected by
the random potential.Comment: Revised version, one reference added, Phys. Rev. Lett. in pres
Lattice modulation spectroscopy of strongly interacting bosons in disordered and quasi-periodic optical lattices
We compute the absorption spectrum of strongly repulsive one-dimensional
bosons in a disordered or quasi-periodic optical lattice. At commensurate
filling, the particle-hole resonances of the Mott insulator are broadened as
the disorder strength is increased. In the non-commensurate case, mapping the
problem to the Anderson model allows us to study the Bose-glass phase.
Surprisingly we find that a perturbative treatment in both cases, weak and
strong disorder, gives a good description at all frequencies. In particular we
find that the infrared absorption rate in the thermodynamic limit is quadratic
in frequency. This result is unexpected, since for other quantities like the
conductivity in one dimensional systems, perturbation theory is only applicable
at high frequencies. We discuss applications to recent experiments on optical
lattice systems, and in particular the effect of the harmonic trap.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Luttinger liquid of trimers in Fermi gases with unequal masses
We investigate one dimensional attractive Fermi gases in spin-dependent
optical lattices. We show that three-body bound states - "trimers" - exist as
soon as the two tunneling rates are different. We calculate the binding energy
and the effective mass of a single trimer. We then show numerically that for
finite and commensurate densities an energy gap
appears, implying that the gas is a one-component Luttinger liquid of trimers
with suppressed superfluid ordering. The boundaries of this novel phase are
given. We discuss experimental situations to test our predictions.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Final accepted versio
Attractive Fermi gases with unequal spin populations in highly elongated traps
We investigate two-component attractive Fermi gases with imbalanced spin
populations in trapped one dimensional configurations. The ground state
properties are determined within local density approximation, starting from the
exact Bethe-ansatz equations for the homogeneous case. We predict that the
atoms are distributed according to a two-shell structure: a partially polarized
phase in the center of the trap and either a fully paired or a fully polarized
phase in the wings. The partially polarized core is expected to be a superfluid
of the FFLO type. The size of the cloud as well as the critical spin
polarization needed to suppress the fully paired shell, are calculated as a
function of the coupling strength.Comment: Final accepted versio
Transport Properties in the "Strange Metal Phase" of High Tc Cuprates: Spin-Charge Gauge Theory Versus Experiments
The SU(2)xU(1) Chern-Simons spin-charge gauge approach developed earlier to
describe the transport properties of the cuprate superconductors in the
``pseudogap'' regime, in particular, the metal-insulator crossover of the
in-plane resistivity, is generalized to the ``strange metal'' phase at higher
temperature/doping. The short-range antiferromagnetic order and the gauge field
fluctuations, which were the key ingredients in the theory for the pseudogap
phase, also play an important role in the present case. The main difference
between these two phases is caused by the existence of an underlying
statistical -flux lattice for charge carriers in the former case, whereas
the background flux is absent in the latter case. The Fermi surface then
changes from small ``arcs'' in the pseudogap to a rather large closed line in
the strange metal phase. As a consequence the celebrated linear in T dependence
of the in-plane and out-of-plane resistivity is shown explicitly to recover.
The doping concentration and temperature dependence of theoretically calculated
in-plane and out-of-plane resistivity, spin-relaxation rate and AC conductivity
are compared with experimental data, showing good agreement.Comment: 14 pages, 5 .eps figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. B, revised version
submitted on 24 Oc
Emerging roles of 3D-culture systems in tackling tumor drug resistance
Drug resistance that affects patients universally is a major challenge in cancer therapy. The development of drug resistance in cancer cells is a multifactor event, and its process involves numerous mechanisms that allow these cells to evade the effect of treatments. As a result, the need to understand the molecular mechanisms underlying cancer drug sensitivity is imperative. Traditional 2D cell culture systems have been utilized to study drug resistance, but they often fail to mimic the 3D milieu and the architecture of real tissues and cell-cell interactions. As a result of this, 3D cell culture systems are now considered a comprehensive model to study drug resistance in vitro. Cancer cells exhibit an in vivo behavior when grown in a three-dimensional environment and react to therapy more physiologically. In this review, we discuss the relevance of main 3D culture systems in the study of potential approaches to overcome drug resistance and in the identification of personalized drug targets with the aim of developing patient-specific treatment strategies that can be put in place when resistance emerges
In-Plane Conductivity Anisotropy in Underdoped Cuprates in the Spin-Charge Gauge Approach
Applying the recently developed spin-charge gauge theory for the pseudogap
phase in cuprates, we propose a self-consistent explanation of several peculiar
features of the far-infrared in-plane AC conductivity, including a broad peak
as a function of frequency and significant anisotropy at low temperatures,
along with a similar temperature-dependent in-plane anisotropy of DC
conductivity in lightly doped cuprates. The anisotropy of the metal-insulator
crossover scale is considered to be responsible for these phenomena. The
obtained results are in good agreement with experiments. An explicit proposal
is made to further check the theory.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
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