Few-body precursor of the Higgs mode in a superfluid Fermi gas - from theory to experiments.
ORAL
Abstract
We demonstrate the presence of an undamped few-body precursor of the Higgs mode in an ultracold trapped Fermi gas.
Here, the lowest excitation mode frequency has non-monotonical dependence on the interaction strength, attaining a minimum in the crossover region.
In the many-body limit, the Higgs mode appears as a zero-energy excitation mode at the quantum phase transition point between the superfluid and the normal phase.
In the few-body limit, we observe an energy minimum that deepens with increasing particle number, reflecting the fact that we see a few-body Higgs mode analog which develops towards a zero-energy excitation.
This hallmark of the Higgs mode is persistent also for weakly anharmonic and anisotropic traps, and it can readily be observed in a new generation of microtraps where the Higgs mode is selectively excited by modulating the interaction strength via Feshbach resonances.
Using variations of the Hartree-Fock Bogoliubov method combined with exact diagonalization, we track the development of the few-body mode into the regime of N~100 particles.
Here, the lowest excitation mode frequency has non-monotonical dependence on the interaction strength, attaining a minimum in the crossover region.
In the many-body limit, the Higgs mode appears as a zero-energy excitation mode at the quantum phase transition point between the superfluid and the normal phase.
In the few-body limit, we observe an energy minimum that deepens with increasing particle number, reflecting the fact that we see a few-body Higgs mode analog which develops towards a zero-energy excitation.
This hallmark of the Higgs mode is persistent also for weakly anharmonic and anisotropic traps, and it can readily be observed in a new generation of microtraps where the Higgs mode is selectively excited by modulating the interaction strength via Feshbach resonances.
Using variations of the Hartree-Fock Bogoliubov method combined with exact diagonalization, we track the development of the few-body mode into the regime of N~100 particles.
*This research was supported by the Swedish Research Council, the Knut and Alice Wallenberg foundation, and NanoLund at Lund University. GMB would like to acknowledge the support of the Villum Foundation and ESF POLATOM network.
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Presenters
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Johannes Bjerlin
- Univ of Copenhagen