Josephson effect and $SU (N)$ superfluidity in an optical lattice clock

ORAL

Abstract

Josephson effect is a quantum interference phenomenon that results from weak coupling (junction) of two superfluid systems. It offers an invaluable tool to perform phase-sensitive measurements of condensate wavefunctions. In this work, we propose a protocol to realize a Josephson junction with $SU (N)$-symmetric [$N$ is the number of populated nuclear-spin states] fermionic ${}^{87}$Sr atoms in a quasi-1D optical lattice that consists of weakly-coupled 2D harmonically-trapped clouds (pancakes). Within each pancake, the axial confinement couples a two-atom scattering channel and their molecular channel, leading to an $s$-wave superfluid state. These superfluid correlations can be enhanced by using a photo-association laser that drives the formation of bound pairs and effectively reduces the molecular-channel detuning. A weak inter-pancake single-atom tunneling gives rise to a Josephson current along the system, which can be detected thanks to the ultra-high spectral resolution and exquisite controllability of the Sr optical lattice clock transition. We also describe ways of exploiting this Josephson effect to probe the $SU (N)$ structure of the emergent superfluid state.

*This work was supported by NSF (PHY-1211914, PHY-1521080 and JILA-PFC-PHY-1734006), AFOSR FA9550-13-1-0086, AFOSR-MURI Advanced Quantum Materials, NIST and DARPA W911NF-16-1-0576 through ARO.

Authors

  • Leonid Isaev

    • JILA, University of Colorado Boulder
  • Ana Maria Rey

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