1,739 research outputs found
Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov state of two-dimensional imbalanced Fermi gases
The ground-state phase diagram of attractively-interacting Fermi gases in two
dimensions with a population imbalance is investigated. We find the regime of
stability for the Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov (FFLO) phase, in which
pairing occurs at finite wave vector, and determine the magnitude of the
pairing amplitude and FFLO wavevector in the ordered phase,
finding that can be of the order of the two-body binding energy. Our
results rely on a careful analysis of the zero temperature gap equation for the
FFLO state, which possesses nonanalyticities as a function of and ,
invalidating a Ginzburg-Landau expansion in small .Comment: 16 pages. 14 figure files. Submitted to Physical Review
Comment on "Superfluid stability in the BEC-BCS crossover"
We point out an error in recent work by Pao, Wu, and Yip [Phys. Rev.B {\bf
73}, 132506 (2006)], that stems from their use of a necessary but not
sufficient condition [positive compressibility (magnetic susceptibility) and
superfluid stiffness] for the stability of the ground state of a polarized
Fermi gas. As a result, for a range of detunings their proposed ground-state
solution is a local maximum rather than a minimum of the ground state energy,
which thereby invalidates their proposed phase diagram for resonantly
interacting fermions under an imposed population difference.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Version in PR
Density profiles and collective modes of a Bose-Einstein condensate with light-induced spin-orbit coupling
The phases of a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) with light-induced spin-orbit
coupling (SOC) are studied within the mean-field approximation. The mixed BEC
phase, in which the system condenses in a superposition of two plane wave
states, is found to be stable for sufficiently small light-atom coupling,
becoming unstable in a continuous fashion with increasing light-atom coupling.
The structure of the phase diagram at fixed chemical potential for bosons with
SOC is shown to imply an unusual density dependence for a trapped mixed BEC
phase, with the density of one dressed spin state increasing with increasing
radius, providing a unique experimental signature of this state. The collective
Bogoliubov sound mode is shown to also provide a signature of the mixed BEC
state, vanishing as the boundary to the regime of phase separation is
approached.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. Published Versio
Intrinsic resistivity and the SO(5) theory of high-temperature superconductors
The topological structure of the order parameter in Zhang's SO(5) theory of
superconductivity allows for an unusual type of dissipation mechanism via which
current-carrying states can decay. The resistivity due to this mechanism, which
involves orientation rather than amplitude order-parameter fluctuations, is
calculated for the case of a thin superconducting wire. The approach is a
suitably modified version of that pioneered by Langer and Ambegaokar for
conventional superconductors.Comment: 4 pages, including 1 figure (REVTEX); references added, minor
corrections mad
Feynman path-integral approach to the QED3 theory of the pseudogap
In this work the connection between vortex condensation in a d-wave
superconductor and the QED gauge theory of the pseudogap is elucidated. The
approach taken circumvents the use of the standard Franz-Tesanovic gauge
transformation, borrowing ideas from the path-integral analysis of the
Aharonov-Bohm problem. An essential feature of this approach is that
gauge-transformations which are prohibited on a particular multiply-connected
manifold (e.g. a superconductor with vortices) can be successfully performed on
the universal covering space associated with that manifold.Comment: 15 pages, 1 Figure. Int. J. Mod. Phys. B 17, 4509 (2003). Minor
changes from previous versio
Quantum decoupling transition in a one-dimensional Feshbach-resonant superfluid
We study a one-dimensional gas of fermionic atoms interacting via an s-wave
molecular Feshbach resonance. At low energies the system is characterized by
two Josephson-coupled Luttinger liquids, corresponding to paired atomic and
molecular superfluids. We show that, in contrast to higher dimensions, the
system exhibits a quantum phase transition from a phase in which the two
superfluids are locked together to one in which, at low energies, quantum
fluctuations suppress the Feshbach resonance (Josephson) coupling, effectively
decoupling the molecular and atomic superfluids. Experimental signatures of
this quantum transition include the appearance of an out-of-phase gapless mode
(in addition to the standard gapless in-phase mode) in the spectrum of the
decoupled superfluid phase and a discontinuous change in the molecular momentum
distribution function.Comment: 4 RevTeX pages, 1 figure, submitted to PR
Topological phases of topological insulator thin films
We study the properties of a thin film of topological insulator material. We
treat the coupling between helical states at opposite surfaces of the film in
the properly-adapted tunneling approximation, and show that the tunneling
matrix element oscillates as function of both the film thickness and the
momentum in the plane of the film for BiSe and BiTe. As a
result, while the magnitude of the matrix element at the center of the surface
Brillouin Zone gives the gap in the energy spectrum, the sign of the matrix
element uniquely determines the topological properties of the film, as
demonstrated by explicitly computing the pseudospin textures and the Chern
number. We find a sequence of transitions between topological and
non-topological phases, separated by semimetallic states, as the film thickness
varies. In the topological phase the edge states of the film always exist but
only carry a spin current if the edge potentials break particle-hole symmetry.
The edge states decay very slowly away from the boundary in BiSe,
making BiTe, where this scale is shorter, a more promising
candidate for the observation of these states. Our results hold for
free-standing films as well as heterostructures with large-gap insulators
Pairing correlations in a trapped one-dimensional Fermi gas
We use a BCS-type variational wavefunction to study attractively-interacting
quasi one-dimensional (1D) fermionic atomic gases, motivated by cold-atom
experiments that access the 1D regime using an anisotropic harmonic trapping
potential (with trapping frequencies ) that
confines the gas to a cigar-shaped geometry. To handle the presence of the trap
along the -direction, we construct our variational wavefunction from the
harmonic oscillator Hermite functions that are the eigenstates of the
single-particle problem. Using an analytic determination of the effective
interaction among harmonic oscillator states along with a numerical solution of
the resulting variational equations, we make specific experimental predictions
for how pairing correlations would be revealed in experimental probes like the
local density and the momentum correlation function.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures. Published in Phys. Rev.
A self-consistent Hartree-Fock approach for interacting bosons in optical lattices
A theoretical study of interacting bosons in a periodic optical lattice is
presented. Instead of the commonly used tight-binding approach (applicable near
the Mott insulating regime of the phase diagram), the present work starts from
the exact single-particle states of bosons in a cubic optical lattice,
satisfying the Mathieu equation, an approach that can be particularly useful at
large boson fillings. The effects of short-range interactions are incorporated
using a self-consistent Hartree-Fock approximation, and predictions for
experimental observables such as the superfluid transition temperature,
condensate fraction, and boson momentum distribution are presented.Comment: 12 pages, 15 figure file
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