The Structure of Polarized Vortices in the Unitary Fermi Gas

ORAL

Abstract

Fermionic superfluids do not generally support polarization, and the nature of the ground state of a slightly polarized unitary Fermi gas remains an open question. However, vortices naturally support polarization since the pairing gap vanishes in the core of superfluid vortices. The structure of a polarized vortex is not well understood, and may have some interesting properties. To study the microscopic structure of a vortex, we use a density functional theory called the asymmetric superfluid local density approximation (ASLDA) to simulate how vortexes interact, evolve and how energy transfers between paired and unpaired particles. In this talk, I will discuss the structure and properties of polarized vortices using the ASLDA, and how these related to polarized phases through the Thomas-Fermi (TF) approximation

*This work is supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. 1707691.

Authors

  • Chunde Huang

    • Washington State University
  • Michael Forbes

    • Washington State University, University of Washington
    • Washington State Univ
    • Washington State University
  • Gabriel Wlazłowski

    • Warsaw University of Technology, University of Washington
    • Warsaw University of Technology
  • Piotr Magierski

    • Warsaw University of Technology, University of Washington
    • Warsaw University of Technology
  • Konrad Kobuszewski

    • Warsaw University of Technology