Superfluid Hall effect in a Bose-Einstein condensate

ORAL

Abstract

In condensed matter physics, measurement techniques exploiting the Hall effect are widely used to explore the internal properties of solids, ranging from charge-carrier concentrations in semiconductors to the quantum Hall effects in two-dimensional electron gases. While Hall physics is generally associated with the reaction of charged particles to a magnetic field, we observed a superfluid Hall effect in a BEC of neutral $^{87}$Rb atoms subjected to an artificial magnetic field $B^*$. To probe the BEC's properties, we generated an alternating atomic current and measured the cloud's dynamics as a function of $B^*$. When the artificial field is present, an effective Lorentz force acts on the atoms and the current is deflected in the direction transverse to the usual hydrodynamic flow, indicating a Hall effect. The good quantitative agreement between our measurements and a superfluid hydrodynamic model indicates that this Hall effect is associated with the BEC's irrotational superfluidity. By extending the Hall measurement technique to the realm of neutral-atom experiments, we establish this tool as a valuable probe for exploring the internal or many-body properties of ultracold gas systems.

Authors

  • Lindsay J. LeBlanc

    • Joint Quantum Institute, NIST and University of Maryland
  • Karina Jimenez-Garcia

    • Joint Quantum Institute, NIST and University of Maryland
  • Ross A. Williams

    • Joint Quantum Institute, NIST and University of Maryland
  • Matthew C. Beeler

    • Joint Quantum Institute, NIST and University of Maryland
  • Abigail R. Perry

    • Joint Quantum Institute, NIST and University of Maryland
  • William D. Phillips

    • Joint Quantum Institute, NIST and University of Maryland
    • Joint Quantum Institute, NIST, 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