1 / 29

Condensed matter physics in dilute atomic gases S. K. Yip Academia Sinica

Condensed matter physics in dilute atomic gases S. K. Yip Academia Sinica. possible to cool and trap dilute atomic gases. Atoms used: 7 Li 23 Na 87 Rb 1 H He* Yb 6 Li 40 K. Some typical numbers:

Download Presentation

Condensed matter physics in dilute atomic gases S. K. Yip Academia Sinica

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Condensed matter physics in dilute atomic gasesS. K. YipAcademia Sinica

  2. possible to cool and trap dilute atomic gases Atoms used: 7Li 23Na 87Rb 1H He* Yb 6Li 40K Some typical numbers: number of atoms 104 106 108 (final) (mostly) peak density n < 10 14 cm-3 distance between particles ~ 104 A (dilute gas) size of cloud ~ mm temperatures: down to nK

  3. f = I s = I + 1/2 hyperfine spin nuclear spin electron spin mf = - f, - f + 1, …. , f -1, + f (integers for bosons, half-integers for fermions) _ alkalis nucleus + [ closed electronic shell ] + e _ nucleon N odd atom = boson N even fermion 7Li 23Na 87Rb 1H : Bosons 6Li 40K : Fermions

  4. 6Li s = 1/2, i = 1; f = 1/2 , 3/2

  5. Magnetic Trap (most experiments): magnetic moment - m. B ( r ) | B ( r ) | increasing from the center U trapped r not trapped typically can trap only one species ( else loss due to collisions ) effectively scalar ( spinless ) particles

  6. Optical Trap: 1 U ( r ) = - a ( w ) E2 ( r , w ) 2 ex a ( w ) > 0ifreddetuned ( w < wres ) g atoms attracted to strong field region laser . . . . . . .. . .. . . . . . . . . spin degree of freedom remains (c.f. driven harmonic oscillator)

  7. Identical particles fermions bosons many particle wavefunctions: antisymmetric symmetric

  8. can occupy the same single particle states at sufficiently low T macroscopic occupation Bose-Einstein Condensation BOSONS:

  9. Macroscopic wavefunction (common to all condensed particles) (r, t) (c.f Schrodinger wavefunction) Supercurrent: Phase gradient  supercurrent

  10. Quantized vortices: well defined at any position r  If ||  then  unique up to 2n  0  0 2

  11. Rotating superfluid: if  = constant, then not rotating (no current) rotating    constant but circulation quantized  quantized vortices  0  2 

  12. [MIT, Science, 292, 476 (2001)]

  13. FERMIONS:

  14. FERMIONS Exclusion principle: Single species (can be done in magnetic traps): T=0 Particles filled up to Fermi energy Normal Fermi gas (liquid) Generally NOT superfluid Momentum space: Fermi sphere

  15. FERMIONS Two species: need optical trap T=0 still not much interesting unless interacting Momentum space: Fermi sphere

  16. 6Li s = 1/2, i = 1; f = 1/2 , 3/2 }   (need optical trap)

  17. Can be superfluid if attractive interaction : Cooper pairing (Bardeen, Cooper, Schrieffer; BCS) k  -k  all k’s near Fermi surface  Underlying mechanism for superconductivity (in perhaps all superconductors)

  18. B How to get strong enough attractive interaction in dilute Fermi gases Feshbach Resonances: (others) (1 2) Bres

  19. Hydridization  level repulsion

  20. Hydridization  level repulsion Lowering of energy  attractive interaction

  21. B Two particles no coupling:  continuum continuum closed channel molecule

  22. with coupling: Bound state effective attractive interaction between   fermions

  23. Bound state eventually BEC of molecules effective attractive interaction between   fermions BCS pairing

  24. Smooth crossover from BCS pairing to BEC (Leggett 80)

  25. Experimental evidence: (resonance) [MIT, Nature, 435, 1047 (2005)]

  26. New possibilities: unequal population [c.f. superconductor in external Zeeman field: pair-breaking ] Smooth crossover is destroyed ! ( Pao, Wu, Yip; 2006) N uniform superfluid state unstable in shaded region BF homogenous mixture

  27. Many potential ground states for the shaded region experiments suggest phase separation near resonance another likely candidate state: Larkin-Ovchinnikov/ domain-walls (c.f. -junctions in SFS) not yet found Finite T phase diagram open question Interesting interacting system even when it is not superfluid (non-Fermi liquid behaviours?)

  28. Many other topics not covered: atoms in periodic lattice (c.f. solid!) “random” potential multicomponent (spin) Bosonic superfluids low dimensional systems (e.g 1D) rapidly rotating Bose gas (maximum number of vortices ?) tunable parameters, often in real time and many more opportunities!!

More Related