Suppressing the loss of ultracold molecules via the continuous quantum Zeno effect

ORAL

Abstract

We develop theoretical methods to explain the recently observed suppression of chemical reactions between two rotational states of fermionic KRb molecules confined in 1D tubes with a superimposed optical lattice along them [Yan {\it et al}., Nature 501, 521 (2013)]. The loss suppression is a consequence of both lattice confinement and the continuous quantum Zeno effect, which in this case takes place in the regime where the two-body loss is larger than other energy scales in the lattice. To quantitatively analyze the experiment, we derive a renormalized single-band model which accounts for 3D multi-band effects, and formulate from it a rate equation and mean-field theory validated by comparing with numerically exact t-DMRG. We demonstrate that the renormalized model captures the measured dependence of the loss rate on all lattice parameters, allowing us to determine the filling fraction.

Authors

  • Bihui Zhu

    JILA

  • Bryce Gadway

    JILA

  • Michael Foss-Feig

    JQI, JQI, NIST-Maryland

  • Johannes Schachenmayer

    JILA

  • Michael Wall

    JILA, JILA, University of Colorado, Boulder

  • Kaden Hazzard

    JILA, NIST and Dept. of Physics, CU Boulder, JILA, University of Colorado and National Institute of Standards and Technology, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0440, USA, JILA, JILA, NIST, and University of Colorado, Boulder

  • Bo Yan

    JILA, NIST, and University of Colorado, Boulder, JILA

  • Steven Moses

    JILA

  • Jacob Covey

    JILA

  • Deborah Jin

    JILA, NIST and University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0440, USA and Department of Physics, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309-04, NIST and Univ of Colorado, Boulder, JILA, NIST, and University of Colorado, Boulder, JILA

  • Jun Ye

    JILA, NIST, and University of Colorado, Boulder, JILA

  • Murray Holland

    JILA, University of Colorado Boulder, JILA

  • Ana Maria Rey

    JILA, JILA, NIST, and University of Colorado, Boulder, JILA and University of Colorado, JILA, NIST, and Department of Physics, University of Colorado Boulder