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Experiments with Fermi e Bose atomic gases in optical lattices Giovanni Modugno LENS, Università di Firenze, and INFM XXVII Convegno di Fisica Teorica, Cortona, May 2005 Introduction Motivations Ultracold atomic gases in optical lattices are potentially a powerful model system to study condensed-matter problems (almost everything can be easily tuned) Interesting applications beyond condensed matter are arising Outline of the talk Production and properties of atomic quantum gases; optical lattices Experiments with Bose-Einstein condensates: superfluid transport, instabilities and localization driven by interactions Experiments with Fermi gases: fundamental transport phenomena and applications Future directions Production methods Laser cooling in magneto-optical traps: T =10µK Evaporative/sympathetic cooling in magnetic traps: T =10nK 40K 87Rb fermions bosons 145 nK 110 nK 80 nK Typical parameters: N = 105-107 n =1012 -1014 cm-3 l = 10-1000 µm Tmin=0.1 TF, 0.1 Tc Detection of momentum distribution by absorption imaging with resonant light Roati et al. Phys.Rev. Lett. 89, 150403 (2002). Ultracold collisions Molecular interaction between neutral atoms: contact interaction σ= - 8π k2 2 ∑ (2l + 1) sin δ l even l odd l Even waves for identical bosons, odd waves for identical fermions All waves with l≠0 are thermally suppressed as E2l σ s = 4πa 2 No interactions between identical fermions below 100µK De Marco and Jin, Phys. Rev. Lett. 1999 Fano-Feshbach resonances Magnetically tunable resonances  tunable interaction in s, p, and other waves  observed or expected for all alkali species (both homo- and hetero-nuclear) Molecules formation and Cooper pairing in Fermi gases Bose-Einstein condensation of molecules Molecules formation at FanoFeshbach resonances JILA, Innsbruck, ENS, MIT, Rice University Condensation of Cooper pairs F. Chevy and C. Salomon, Physics World, March 2005 Optical lattices Optical dipole potential: r 3πc 2 Γ r U (r ) = I (r ) 3 2ω Δ 1D optical lattice: U ( z , r ) = U 0 (1 + cos(2π z / λ )) × exp(−r 2 / w2 ) z Natural energy and momentum scales: h2 ER = 2mλ2 h qB = λ EER R 00 }}εε }}22δδ -q -qBB λ= 1µm, qB= 5 mm s-1, ER = 100 nK, U = 1-100 ER q xxq +q +qBB Cubic lattices with various dimensionalities 1D, 2D, 3D, other geometries, lattices with large spacing 1-10 µm, … Bose gases in optical lattices Superfluidity and interactions in periodic potentials  macroscopic transport at low interaction strengths  insulating phases due to interactions Transport of di a superfluid Gas Bose in reticoli ottici: trasporto superfluido Collective dipole oscillations Horizontal Position (pix) ___________________________________________________________________ 44 42 40 38 36 0 50 100 Thermal cloud 150 200 250 300 350 Time (ms) BEC 0 ms 20 ms 40 ms 60 ms 80 ms F. Cataliotti, et al. Science 293, 843 (2001). Band spectroscopy and dynamical instabilities 2.0 s=0 s = 1.3 s = 3.8 B ) velocity (v/v 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 quasimomentum (q/q ) B 2.0 Optical lattices can be put in motion: Spectroscopy of the lattice band dispersion with a BEC What is the role of atomic interactions? cos()2RisEkxgtmψψψ∂=−∇++∂hh 2222 L. Fallani, et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 140406 (2004). Band spectroscopy and dynamical instabilities growth of excitations (lattice on) 0.08 -1 loss rate [ms] 0.40qB 0.06 0.04 10 200 500 800 1000 1200 2 5 10 20 30 35 1500 ms 0.02 0.55qB 0.00 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 quasimomentum (q/q ) B 55 What is the role of atomic interactions? cos()2RisEkxgtmψψψ∂=−∇++∂hh 2222 L. Fallani, et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 140406 (2004). ms Localization in a Mott insulator (M. Greiner et al., Nature 415, 39 (2002)) 1ˆˆˆˆˆ (1)2ijiiiiijiiHJaanUnnε=−++−∑∑∑ †, Bose-Hubbard Hamiltonian SUPERFLUID PHASE MOTT INSULATOR PHASE 1. Long-range phase coherence 2. High number fluctuations 3. No gap in the excitation spectrum 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. No phase coherence Zero number fluctuations Gap in the excitation spectrum Vanishing superfluid fraction Vanishing compressibility Fermi gases in optical lattices Identical fermions: an ideal gas in a perfect periodic potential  transport properties of a perfect crystal of atoms  applications Transport of di a non interacting Fermi ottici: gas Gas Bose in reticoli trasporto superfluido ___________________________________________________________________ Collective dipole oscillations Position s=7 Fermions remain trapped on the side of the harmonic potential 0 2 4 Time 6 s=0 Transport of a non-interacting Fermi gas E ε EF An ideal crystal is an insulator. }2δ x s=5 Ott, et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 120407 (2004), Rigol and Muramatsu, Phys.Rev. A 63, (2004), Hooley and Quintanilla, Phys. Rev. Lett. 93,080404, (2004). Collision-induced transport decay time (ms) 10000 Esaki-Tsu model for electrons in superlattices ω 1000 BO 100 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 -1 collisional rate (s ) Tuning collisions in a boson-fermion mixture: crossover from an ideal conductor (that behaves like an insulator) to a real conductor Pezzè et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, (2004); Ott et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 160601 (2004). Spectroscopy of localized states Atoms in delocalized states can be selectively removed with a RF knife E ε RF sweep }2δ x Ott, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 120407 (2004). s=5 Applications  quantum computing  atom interferometry for force sensing Quantum registers: Bose vs Fermi What is needed:  Macroscopic array of indidually addressable qubits  Lowest possible number of defects  Controllable, coherent interactions to perform operations Bose: Bose interaction-induced localization  One localized particle per lattice site  Controllable interactions between neighbouring sites via spin-selective lattices Fermi: Fermi potential-induced localization  Two localized particle per lattice site  Loading procedure confines defects to the outer shell  Tunable interactions between two states via F-F resonances Wannier-Stark states and Bloch oscillations Wannier-Stark states in a lattice tilted by gravity: Δϕ = 0 Δx = 2δ / F ΔE = mgλ 2 Their interference oscillates: Δϕ = π U 0 = 2 ER -2 -1 0 1 Momentum (q ) B ω B = mgλ / 2h 2 q&= −mg Semiclassical picture: Bloch oscillations -qB q +qB Bloch oscillations + qB − qB Time-resolved Bloch oscillations of trapped, non-interacting fermions 2 ms 2.4 ms 2.8 ms 3.2 ms 3.6 ms 4 ms 4.4 ms 4.8 ms 5.2 ms 5.6 ms G. Roati, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 230402 (2004). Bloch oscillations 1.0 Momentum B(q) 0.5 0.0 -0.5 -1.0 0 5 10 15 250 255 Time (ms) TB = 2h / mgλ TB = 2.32789 (22)ms ⇒ Δg / g = 10 −4 Fermions trapped in lattices: a force sensor with high spatial resolution ( presently 50µm, but no fundamental limitations down to a few lattice sites) Force sensing at the micrometer lengthscale Casimir-Polder potential in proximity of a dielectric surface VCP = − k BTα 0 ε 0 − 1 4z3 ε 0 +1 Features:  high resolution in presence of gravity  direct measurement of forces  low sensitivity to gradients  high sensitivity (10-7g) Applications:  atom-surface interactions out of thermal equilibrium  possible deviations from Newton’s gravitational law at short distances I. Carusotto, L. Pitaevskii, S. Stringari, G. Modugno, M. Inguscio, cond-mat/0503141. Search for non newtonian forces 10-7 g 10-10 g S. Dimopulos and A. A. Geraci, Phys. Rev. D 68, 124021 (2003) Future directions Bose and Fermi gases in 1D optical lattices  phenomenology of the band transport, transport of bosonic and fermionic superfluids  fermionic Bloch oscillator: application to high precision study of fundamental phenomena Bose, Fermi and Fermi-Bose gases in 2D and 3D optical lattices  condensed matter physics: Mott insulators, high Tc superfluidity, …  low dimensionality systems: Luttinger liquids, BEC-BCS, …  applications to quantum computing Optical lattice and random potentials  Anderson localization, Bose and Fermi glasses, …  BEC-BCS in presence of disorder Fermi surface in a 2D lattice The quantum gas team at LENS Estefania De Mirandes, Leonardo Fallani, Francesca Ferlaino, Vera Guarrera, Iacopo Catani, Luigi De Sarlo, Jessica Lye, Giacomo Roati, Herwig Ott Chiara Fort, Francesco Minardi, Michele Modugno Giovanni Modugno, Massimo Inguscio