803 research outputs found
Atom-molecule theory of broad Feshbach resonances
We derive the atom-molecule theory for an atomic gas near a broad Feshbach
resonance, where the energy dependence of the atom-molecule coupling becomes
crucial for understanding experimental results. We show how our many-body
theory incorporates the two-atom physics exactly. In particular, we calculate
the magnetic moment of a two-component gas of ^{6}Li atoms for a wide range of
magnetic fields near the broad Feshbach resonance at about 834 Gauss. We find
excellent agreement with the experiment of Jochim et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 91,
240402 (2003)].Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Effective one-component description of two-component Bose-Einstein condensate dynamics
We investigate dynamics in two-component Bose-Einstein condensates in the
context of coupled Gross-Pitaevskii equations and derive results for the
evolution of the total density fluctuations. Using these results, we show how,
in many cases of interest, the dynamics can be accurately described with an
effective one-component Gross-Pitaevskii equation for one of the components,
with the trap and interaction coefficients determined by the relative
differences in the scattering lengths. We discuss the model in various regimes,
where it predicts breathing excitations, and the formation of vector solitons.
An effective nonlinear evolution is predicted for some cases of current
experimental interest. We then apply the model to construct quasi-stationary
states of two-component condensates.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Bright soliton trains of trapped Bose-Einstein condensates
We variationally determine the dynamics of bright soliton trains composed of
harmonically trapped Bose-Einstein condensates with attractive interatomic
interactions. In particular, we obtain the interaction potential between two
solitons. We also discuss the formation of soliton trains due to the quantum
mechanical phase fluctuations of a one-dimensional condensate.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, submitted to PR
Bright matter wave solitons in Bose-Einstein condensates
We review recent experimental and theoretical work on the creation
of bright matter wave solitons in Bose–Einstein condensates. In two recent experiments,
solitons are formed from Bose–Einstein condensates of 7Li by utilizing
a Feshbach resonance to switch from repulsive to attractive interactions.
The solitons are made to propagate in a one-dimensional potential formed by a
focused laser beam. For repulsive interactions, the wavepacket undergoes dispersivewavepacket
spreading, while for attractive interactions, localized solitons are
formed. In our experiment, a multi-soliton train containing up to ten solitons is
observed to propagate without spreading for a duration of 2 s. Adjacent solitons
are found to interact repulsively, in agreement with a calculation based on the
nonlinear Schr¨odinger equation assuming that the soliton train is formed with an
alternating phase structure. The origin of this phase structure is not entirely clear
Gap solitons in superfluid boson-fermion mixtures
Using coupled equations for the bosonic and fermionic order parameters, we
construct families of gap solitons (GSs) in a nearly one-dimensional Bose-Fermi
mixture trapped in a periodic optical-lattice (OL) potential, the boson and
fermion components being in the states of the BEC and BCS superfluid,
respectively. Fundamental GSs are compact states trapped, essentially, in a
single cell of the lattice. Full families of such solutions are constructed in
the first two bandgaps of the OL-induced spectrum, by means of variational and
numerical methods, which are found to be in good agreement. The families
include both intra-gap and inter-gap solitons, with the chemical potentials of
the boson and fermion components falling in the same or different bandgaps,
respectively.Nonfundamental states, extended over several lattice cells, are
constructed too. The GSs are stable against strong perturbations.Comment: 9 pages, 14 figure
Soliton response to transient trap variations
The response of bright and dark solitons to rapid variations in an expulsive
longitudinal trap is investigated. We concentrate on the effect of transient
changes in the trap frequency in the form of temporal delta kicks and the
hyperbolic cotangent functions. Exact expressions are obtained for the soliton
profiles. This is accomplished using the fact that a suitable linear
Schrodinger stationary state solution in time can be effectively combined with
the solutions of non-linear Schrodinger equation, for obtaining solutions of
the Gross-Pitaevskii equation with time dependent scattering length in a
harmonic trap. Interestingly, there is rapid pulse amplification in certain
scenarios
Matter-wave soliton control in optical lattices with topological dislocations
We address the concept of guiding and transporting matter-wave solitons along
the channels of optical lattices made by interference patterns of beams
containing topological wavefront dislocations. The local lattice distortions
that occur around the dislocations cause solitons to move along reconfigurable
paths, a phenomenon that may be used for controlled all-optical manipulation of
Bose-Einstein condensates. Multiple dislocations form traps that can capture
and hold moving solitons.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Physical Review
Tree-body loss of of trapped ultracold Rb atoms due to a Feshbach resonance
The loss of ultracold trapped atoms in the vicinity of a Feshbach resonance
is treated as a two-stage reaction, using the Breit-Wigner theory. The first
stage is the formation of a resonant diatomic molecule, and the second one is
its deactivation by inelastic collisions with other atoms. This model is
applied to the analysis of recent experiments on Rb, leading to an
estimated value of cms for the deactivation rate
coefficient.Comment: LaTeX, 4 pages with 1 figures, uses REVTeX4, uses improved
experimental dat
Symbiotic modeling: Linguistic Anthropology and the promise of chiasmus
Reflexive observations and observations of reflexivity: such agendas are by now standard practice in anthropology. Dynamic feedback loops between self and other, cause and effect, represented and representamen may no longer seem surprising; but, in spite of our enhanced awareness, little deliberate attention is devoted to modeling or grounding such phenomena. Attending to both linguistic and extra-linguistic modalities of chiasmus (the X figure), a group of anthropologists has recently embraced this challenge. Applied to contemporary problems in linguistic anthropology, chiasmus functions to highlight and enhance relationships of interdependence or symbiosis between contraries, including anthropology’s four fields, the nature of human being and facets of being human
Moderate Resolution Spectroscopy For The Space Infrared Telescope Facility (SIRTF)
A conceptual design for an infrared spectrometer capable of both low resolution (λ/Δ-λ = 50; 2.5-200 microns) and moderate resolution (1000; 4-200 microns) and moderate resolution (1000; 4-200 microns) has been developed. This facility instrument will permit the spectroscopic study in the infrared of objects ranging from within the solar system to distant galaxies. The spectroscopic capability provided by this instrument for SIRTF will give astronomers orders of magnitude greater sensitivity for the study of faint objects than had been previously available. The low resolution mode will enable detailed studies of the continuum radiation. The moderate resolution mode of the instrument will permit studies of a wide range of problems, from the infrared spectral signatures of small outer solar system bodies such as Pluto and the satellites of the giant planets, to investigations of more luminous active galaxies and QS0s at substantially greater distances. A simple design concept has been developed for the spectrometer which supports the science investigation with practical cryogenic engineering. Operational flexibility is preserved with a minimum number of mechanisms. The five modules share a common aperture, and all gratings share a single scan mechanism. High reliability is achieved through use of flight-proven hardware concepts and redundancy. The design controls the heat load into the SIRTF cryogen, with all heat sources other than the detectors operating at 7K and isolated from the 4K cold station. Two-dimensional area detector arrays are used in the 2.5-120μm bands to simultaneously monitor adjacent regions in extended objects and to measure the background near point sources
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