Atoms with different internal states can exhibit different responses to an
artificial magnetic field. An atomic gas mixture of two different components
can therefore be interpreted as a mixture of two atomic gases carrying
different synthetic charges. We consider the superfluid state of such unequally
charged Fermi gases coupled to a magnetic field via the orbital effect and
trapped in a torus geometry. The orbital coupling to the magnetic field favors
an inhomogeneous superfluid state with optimum finite center-of-mass momentum
pairing. The resulting population-balanced orbital Fulde-Ferrell (FF) state is
robust against the magnetic field and does not undergo pair breaking unlike the
conventional BCS and Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov type pairing states under
the Zeeman effect. We contrast the homogeneous and inhomogeneous cases
emphasizing the advantages of the unequally charged systems and present their
momentum distributions. We conclude that an unequally charged atomic Fermi gas
system orbitally coupled to an artificial magnetic field provides an ideal
candidate for experimental realization of the FF state.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure