4 research outputs found

    Suppression of Spontaneous Defect Formation in Inhomogeneous Bose Gases

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    In phase transition dynamics involving symmetry breaking, topological defects can be spontaneously created but it is suppressed in a spatially inhomogeneous system due to the spreading of the ordered phase information. We demonstrate the defect suppression effect in a trapped atomic Bose gas which is quenched into a superfluid phase. The spatial distribution of created defects is measured for various quench times and it is shown that for slower quenches, the spontaneous defect production is relatively more suppressed in the sample's outer region with higher atomic density gradient. The power-law scaling of the local defect density with the quench time is enhanced in the outer region, which is consistent with the Kibble-Zurek mechanism including the causality effect due to the spatial inhomogeneity of the system. This work opens an avenue in the study of nonequilibrium phase transition dynamics using the defect position information.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure

    Vortex shedding frequency of a moving obstacle in a Bose-Einstein condensate

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    We experimentally investigate the periodic vortex shedding dynamics in a highly oblate Bose-Einstein condensate using a moving penetrable Gaussian obstacle. The shedding frequency f (v) is measured as a function of the obstacle velocity v and characterized by a linear relationship of f (v) = a(v - v (c)) with v (c) being the critical velocity. The proportionality constant a is linearly decreased with a decrease in the obstacle strength, whereas v (c) approaches the speed of sound. When the obstacle size increases, both a and v (c) are decreased. We discuss a possible association of a with the Strouhal number in the context of universal shedding dynamics of a superfluid. The critical vortex shedding is further investigated for an oscillating obstacle and found to be consistent with the measured f (v). When the obstacle's maximum velocity exceeds v (c) but its oscillation amplitude is not large enough to create a vortex dipole, we observe that vortices are generated in the low-density boundary region of the trapped condensate, which is attributed to the phonon emission from the oscillating obstacle.11Nsciescopu

    Variations of the Kibble-Zurek scaling exponents of trapped Bose gases

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    We study the vortex nucleation dynamics in inhomogeneous atomic Bose gases quenched into a superfluid phase and investigate the dependence of the Kibble-Zurek (KZ) scaling exponent on the underlying trap configuration. For samples in a number of different inhomogeneous traps, we observe the characteristic power-law scaling of the vortex number with the thermal quench rate, as well as an enhanced vortex suppression in the outer regions with lower particle density, in agreement with the causality effect as encapsulated in the inhomogeneous Kibble-Zurek mechanism (IKZM). However, the measured KZ scaling exponents show significant differences from the theoretical estimates, and furthermore their trends as a function of the underlying trap configuration deviate from the IKZM prediction. We also investigate the early-time coarsening effect using a two-step quench protocol as proposed in a recent study and show that the interpretation of the measurement results without including the causality effect might be misleading. This paper provides a comprehensive study of vortex formation dynamics in quenched Bose gases confined in inhomogeneous trapping potentials and calls for a refined theoretical framework for quantitative understanding of the phase transition and defect formation processes in such inhomogeneous systems. © 2023 American Physical Society.11Nsciescopu

    Universal Early Coarsening of Quenched Bose Gases

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    © 2022 American Physical Society.We investigate the early coarsening dynamics of an atomic Bose gas quenched into a superfluid phase. Using a two-step quench protocol, we independently control the two cooling rates during and after passing through the critical region, respectively, and measure the number of quantum vortices spontaneously created in the system. The latter cooling rate regulates the temperature during the condensate growth, consequently controlling the early coarsening dynamics in the defect formation. We find that the defect number shows a scaling behavior with the latter cooling rate regardless of the initial cooling rate, indicating universal coarsening dynamics in the early stage of condensate growth. Our results demonstrate that early coarsening not only reduces the defect density, but also affects its scaling with the quench rate, which is beyond the Kibble-Zurek mechanism.11Nsciescopu
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