2,661 research outputs found

    Spectral Equivalence of Bosons and Fermions in One-Dimensional Harmonic Potentials

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    Recently, Schmidt and Schnack (cond-mat/9803151, cond-mat/9810036), following earlier references, reiterate that the specific heat of N non-interacting bosons in a one-dimensional harmonic well equals that of N fermions in the same potential. We show that this peculiar relationship between specific heats results from a more dramatic equivalence between bose and fermi systems. Namely, we prove that the excitation spectrums of such bose and fermi systems are spectrally equivalent. Two complementary proofs are provided, one based on an analysis of the dynamical symmetry group of the N-body system, the other using combinatoric analysis.Comment: Six Pages, No Figures, Submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Limits to Sympathetic Evaporative Cooling of a Two-Component Fermi Gas

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    We find a limit cycle in a quasi-equilibrium model of evaporative cooling of a two-component fermion gas. The existence of such a limit cycle represents an obstruction to reaching the quantum ground state evaporatively. We show that evaporatively the \beta\mu ~ 1. We speculate that one may be able to cool an atomic fermi gas further by photoassociating dimers near the bottom of the fermi sea.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev

    Bose-Einstein condensates in RF-dressed adiabatic potentials

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    Bose-Einstein condensates of 87^{87}Rb atoms are transferred into radio-frequency (RF) induced adiabatic potentials and the properties of the corresponding dressed states are explored. We report on measurements of the spin composition of dressed condensates. We also show that adiabatic potentials can be used to trap atom gases in novel geometries, including suspending a cigar-shaped cloud above a curved sheet of atoms

    Cooper pairing and single particle properties of trapped Fermi gases

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    We calculate the elementary excitations and pairing of a trapped atomic Fermi gas in the superfluid phase. The level spectra and pairing gaps undergo several transitions as the strength of the interactions between and the number of atoms are varied. For weak interactions, the Cooper pairs are formed between particles residing in the same harmonic oscillator shell. In this regime, the nature of the paired state is shown to depend critically on the position of the chemical potential relative to the harmonic oscillator shells and on the size of the mean field. For stronger interactions, we find a region where pairing occur between time-reversed harmonic oscillator states in different shells also.Comment: Slightly revised version: Mistakes in equation references in figures corrected. Accepted for Phys. Rev.

    Two-species magneto-optical trap with 40K and 87Rb

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    We trap and cool a gas composed of 40K and 87Rb, using a two-species magneto-optical trap (MOT). This trap represents the first step towards cooling the Bose-Fermi mixture to quantum degeneracy. Laser light for the MOT is derived from laser diodes and amplified with a single high power semiconductor amplifier chip. The four-color laser system is described, and the single-species and two-species MOTs are characterized. Atom numbers of 1x10^7 40K and 2x10^9 87Rb are trapped in the two-species MOT. Observation of trap loss due to collisions between species is presented and future prospects for the experiment are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in Physical Review

    Temperature dependence of density profiles for a cloud of non-interacting fermions moving inside a harmonic trap in one dimension

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    We extend to finite temperature a Green's function method that was previously proposed to evaluate ground-state properties of mesoscopic clouds of non-interacting fermions moving under harmonic confinement in one dimension. By calculations of the particle and kinetic energy density profiles we illustrate the role of thermal excitations in smoothing out the quantum shell structure of the cloud and in spreading the particle spill-out from quantum tunnel at the edges. We also discuss the approach of the exact density profiles to the predictions of a semiclassical model often used in the theory of confined atomic gases at finite temperature.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure

    Rapidly Rotating Fermi Gases

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    We show that the density profile of a Fermi gas in rapidly rotating potential will develop prominent features reflecting the underlying Landau level like energy spectrum. Depending on the aspect ratio of the trap, these features can be a sequence of ellipsoidal volumes or a sequence of quantized steps.Comment: 4 pages, 1 postscript fil
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