Phasonic spectroscopy in a tunable quasicrystalline optical lattice

ORAL

Abstract

We describe studies of excitations in a tunable quantum quasicrystal realized using neutral strontium atoms in a bichromatic optical lattice. The phasonic degrees of freedom of solid-state quasicrystals are thought to have significant effects on thermal and electronic transport, yet are typically not dynamically accessible. Driving such a phason mode in a cold-atom context has revealed high-order multiphoton excitation processes, drawing a link to high-harmonic generation processes in solids. We study the dependence of these multiphoton processes on tunneling and modulation strength, and use the phasonic drive as a novel spectroscopic probe of the quasicrystal. Extensions to this work include realizing a phasonic Thouless pump, directly mapping out a slice of the Hofstadter butterfly spectrum, and studying effects of Anderson localization and mobility edges on interband transitions.

*The authors acknowledge support from ARO (MURI W911NF171032) and NSF (CAREER 1555313).

Authors

  • Shankari Rajagopal

    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Toshihiko Shimasaki

    • University of California Santa Barbara
    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Peter Dotti

    • University of California Santa Barbara
    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Ruwan Senaratne

    • University of California Santa Barbara
    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • David Weld

    • University of California Santa Barbara
    • University of California, Santa Barbara