61 research outputs found
Brillouin zone labelling for quasicrystals
We propose a scheme to determine the energy-band dispersion of quasicrystals
which does not require any periodic approximation and which directly provides
the correct structure of the extended Brillouin zones. In the gap labelling
viewpoint, this allow to transpose the measure of the integrated
density-of-states to the measure of the effective Brillouin-zone areas that are
uniquely determined by the position of the Bragg peaks. Moreover we show that
the Bragg vectors can be determined by the stability analysis of the law of
recurrence used to generate the quasicrystal. Our analysis of the gap labelling
in the quasi-momentum space opens the way to an experimental proof of the gap
labelling itself within the framework of an optics experiment, polaritons, or
with ultracold atoms.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
Localization of an inhomogeneous Bose-Einstein condensate in a moving random potential
We study the dynamics of a harmonically trapped quasi-one-dimensional
Bose-Einstein condensate subjected to a moving disorder potential of finite
extent. We show that, due to the inhomogeneity of the sample, only a percentage
of the atoms is localized at supersonic velocities of a random potential. We
find that this percentage can be sensitively increased by introducing suitable
correlations in the disorder potential such as those provided by random dimers.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figure
Suppression of Faraday waves in a Bose-Einstein condensate in the presence of an optical lattice
We study the formation of Faraday waves in an elongated Bose-Einstein
condensate in presence of a one-dimensional optical lattice, where phonons are
parametrically excited by modulating the radial confinement of the condensate.
For very shallow optical lattices, phonons with a well-defined wave vector
propagate along the condensate, as in the absence of the lattice, and we
observe the formation of a Faraday pattern. By increasing the potential depth,
the local sound velocity decreases and when it equals the condensate local
phase velocity, the condensate becomes dynamically unstable and the parametric
excitation of Faraday waves is suppressed
Universal contact for a Tonks-Girardeau gas at finite temperature
We determine the finite-temperature momentum distribution of a strongly
interacting 1D Bose gas in the Tonks-Girardeau (impenetrable-boson) limit under
harmonic confinement, and explore its universal properties associated to the
scale invariance of the model. We show that, at difference from the unitary
Fermi gas in three dimensions, the weight of its large-momentum tails -- given
by the Tan's contact -- increase with temperature, and calculate the
high-temperature universal second contact coefficient using a virial expansion.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Tan's contact of a harmonically trapped one-dimensional Bose gas: strong-coupling expansion and conjectural approach at arbitrary interactions
We study Tan's contact, i.e. the coefficient of the high-momentum tails of
the momentum distribution at leading order, for an interacting one-dimensional
Bose gas subjected to a harmonic confinement. Using a strong-coupling
systematic expansion of the ground-state energy of the homogeneous system
stemming from the Bethe-Ansatz solution, together with the local-density
approximation, we obtain the strong-coupling expansion for Tan's contact of the
harmonically trapped gas. Also, we use a very accurate conjecture for the
ground-state energy of the homogeneous system to obtain an approximate
expression for Tan's contact for arbitrary interaction strength, thus
estimating the accuracy of the strong-coupling expansion. Our results are
relevant for ongoing experiments with ultracold atomic gases
Probing quantum transport by engineering correlations in a speckle potential
We develop a procedure to modify the correlations of a speckle potential.
This procedure, that is suitable for spatial light modulator devices, allows
one to increase the localization efficiency of the speckle in a narrow energy
region whose position can be easily tuned. This peculiar energy-dependent
localization behavior is explored by pulling the potential through a
cigar-shaped Bose-Einstein condensate. We show that the percentage of dragged
atoms as a function of the pulling velocity depends on the potential
correlations below a threshold of the disorder strength. Above this threshold,
interference effects are no longer clearly observable during the condensate
drag.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, final versio
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