65 research outputs found
Observer dependence for the phonon content of the sound field living on the effective curved space-time background of a Bose-Einstein condensate
We demonstrate that the ambiguity of the particle content for quantum fields
in a generally curved space-time can be experimentally investigated in an
ultracold gas of atoms forming a Bose-Einstein condensate. We explicitly
evaluate the response of a suitable condensed matter detector, an ``Atomic
Quantum Dot,'' which can be tuned to measure time intervals associated to
different effective acoustic space-times. It is found that the detector
response related to laboratory, ``adiabatic,'' and de Sitter time intervals is
finite in time and nonstationary, vanishing, and thermal, respectively.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures; references updated, as published in Physical
Review
On the theory of vortex quantum tunnelling in the dense Bose superfluid helium II
The quantum tunnelling and nucleation theory of vortices in helium II is
reviewed. Arguments are given that the only reliable method to calculate
tunnelling probabilities in this highly correlated, strongly interacting
many-body system is the semiclassical, large scale approach for evaluation of
the tunnelling exponent, which does not make any assumptions about the unknown
dynamical behaviour of the fluid on microscopic scales. The geometric
implications of this semiclassical theory are represented in some detail and
its relevance for the interpretation of experimental data is discussed.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures, revised version, to appear in Physica
Relativistic Kinetics of Phonon Gas in Superfluids
The relativistic kinetic theory of the phonon gas in superfluids is
developed. The technique of the derivation of macroscopic balance equations
from microscopic equations of motion for individual particles is applied to an
ensemble of quasi-particles. The necessary expressions are constructed in terms
of a Hamilton function of a (quasi-)particle. A phonon contribution into
superfluid dynamic parameters is obtained from energy-momentum balance
equations for the phonon gas together with the conservation law for superfluids
as a whole. Relations between dynamic flows being in agreement with results of
relativistic hydrodynamic consideration are found. Based on the kinetic
approach a problem of relativistic variation of the speed of sound under phonon
influence at low temperature is solved.Comment: 23 pages, Revtex fil
Coherent particle oscillations between two Bose-Einstein condensates mediated by a single localized impurity atom
Oscillations of a rapidly rotating annular Bose-Einstein condensate
A time-dependent variational Lagrangian analysis based on the
Gross-Pitaevskii energy functional serves to study the dynamics of a metastable
giant vortex in a rapidly rotating Bose-Einstein condensate. The resulting
oscillation frequencies of the core radius reproduce the trends seen in recent
experiments [Engels et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 90, 170405 (2003)], but the
theoretical values are smaller by a factor approximately 0.6-0.8.Comment: 7 pages, revtex
The TF Limit for Rapidly Rotating Bose Gases in Anharmonic Traps
Starting from the full many body Hamiltonian we derive the leading order
energy and density asymptotics for the ground state of a dilute, rotating Bose
gas in an anharmonic trap in the ` Thomas Fermi' (TF) limit when the
Gross-Pitaevskii coupling parameter and/or the rotation velocity tend to
infinity. Although the many-body wave function is expected to have a
complicated phase, the leading order contribution to the energy can be computed
by minimizing a simple functional of the density alone
The Transition to a Giant Vortex Phase in a Fast Rotating Bose-Einstein Condensate
We study the Gross-Pitaevskii (GP) energy functional for a fast rotating
Bose-Einstein condensate on the unit disc in two dimensions. Writing the
coupling parameter as 1 / \eps^2 we consider the asymptotic regime \eps
\to 0 with the angular velocity proportional to
(\eps^2|\log\eps|)^{-1} . We prove that if \Omega = \Omega_0
(\eps^2|\log\eps|)^{-1} and then a minimizer of
the GP energy functional has no zeros in an annulus at the boundary of the disc
that contains the bulk of the mass. The vorticity resides in a complementary
`hole' around the center where the density is vanishingly small. Moreover, we
prove a lower bound to the ground state energy that matches, up to small
errors, the upper bound obtained from an optimal giant vortex trial function,
and also that the winding number of a GP minimizer around the disc is in accord
with the phase of this trial function.Comment: 52 pages, PDFLaTex. Minor corrections, sign convention modified. To
be published in Commun. Math. Phy
Topological Superfluid in one-dimensional Ultracold Atomic System with Spin-Orbit Coupling
We propose a one-dimensional Hamiltonian which supports Majorana
fermions when -wave superfluid appears in the ultracold atomic
system and obtain the phase-separation diagrams both for the
time-reversal-invariant case and time-reversal-symmetry-breaking case. From the
phase-separation diagrams, we find that the single Majorana fermions exist in
the topological superfluid region, and we can reach this region by tuning the
chemical potential and spin-orbit coupling . Importantly, the
spin-orbit coupling has realized in ultracold atoms by the recent experimental
achievement of synthetic gauge field, therefore, our one-dimensional ultra-cold
atomic system described by is a promising platform to find the
mysterious Majorana fermions.Comment: 5 papers, 2 figure
Density Waves in Layered Systems with Fermionic Polar Molecules
A layered system of two-dimensional planes containing fermionic polar
molecules can potentially realize a number of exotic quantum many-body states.
Among the predictions, are density-wave instabilities driven by the anisotropic
part of the dipole-dipole interaction in a single layer. However, in typical
multilayer setups it is reasonable to expect that the onset and properties of a
density-wave are modified by adjacent layers. Here we show that this is indeed
the case. For multiple layers the critical strength for the density-wave
instability decreases with the number of layers. The effect depends on density
and is more pronounced in the low density regime. The lowest solution of the
instability corresponds to the density waves in the different layers being
in-phase, whereas higher solutions have one or several adjancet layers that are
out of phase. The parameter regime needed to explore this instability is within
reach of current experiments.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Final version in EPJD, EuroQUAM special issue
"Cold Quantum Matter - Achievements and Prospects
Vortex Rings in Fast Rotating Bose-Einstein Condensates
When Bose-Eintein condensates are rotated sufficiently fast, a giant vortex
phase appears, that is the condensate becomes annular with no vortices in the
bulk but a macroscopic phase circulation around the central hole. In a former
paper [M. Correggi, N. Rougerie, J. Yngvason, {\it arXiv:1005.0686}] we have
studied this phenomenon by minimizing the two dimensional Gross-Pitaevskii
energy on the unit disc. In particular we computed an upper bound to the
critical speed for the transition to the giant vortex phase. In this paper we
confirm that this upper bound is optimal by proving that if the rotation speed
is taken slightly below the threshold there are vortices in the condensate. We
prove that they gather along a particular circle on which they are evenly
distributed. This is done by providing new upper and lower bounds to the GP
energy.Comment: to appear in Archive of Rational Mechanics and Analysi
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