Effect of synthetic magnetic fields on quasi-2D gases of bosons

ORAL

Abstract

An ultra-cold gas of atoms can realize many different model Hamiltonians. When tightly confined in one spatial dimension, the gas can become effectively 2D. At a critical temperature, a quasi-2D Bose gas undergoes a Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless (BKT) phase transition to a superfluid as thermally excited pairs of vortices with opposite circulation bind together [1]. In general, a superfluid responds to the presence of a synthetic magnetic field with the formation of vortices [2], expected to all have the same circulation direction. These vortices induced by the synthetic magnetic field should have an effect on the microscopic mechanism behind the BKT phase transition, which may alter the properties of the quasi-2D Bose gas.\\[4pt] [1] Hadzibabic, Z. \textit{et al.}, Nature \textbf{441}, 1118--1121 (2006)\\[0pt] [2] Lin, Y.-J. \textit{et al.}, Nature \textbf{462}, 628-632 (2009).

Authors

  • Matthew Beeler

    Joint Quantum Institute, NIST and University of Maryland

  • Karina Jimenez-Garcia

    Joint Quantum Institute, NIST and University of Maryland, JQI (NIST-Univ. of Maryland)

  • Lindsay J. LeBlanc

    Joint Quantum Institute, NIST and University of Maryland

  • Abigail R. Perry

    Joint Quantum Institute, NIST and University of Maryland

  • Ross A. Williams

    Joint Quantum Institute, NIST and University of Maryland

  • Ian Spielman

    Joint Quantum Institute, NIST and University of Maryland, Joint Quantum Institute, NIST, and University of Maryland, JQI, NIST, and University of Maryland, NIST Gaithersburg, JQI, NIST and the University of Maryland