Quantum Membrane Phases in Synthetic Lattices of Cold Molecules or Rydberg Atoms
ORAL
Abstract
We calculate properties of dipolar interacting ultracold molecules or Rydberg atoms in a semisynthetic three-dimensional configuration—one synthetic dimension plus a two-dimensional real-space optical lattice or periodic microtrap array—using the stochastic Green's function quantum Monte Carlo method. Through a calculation of thermodynamic quantities and appropriate correlation functions, along with their finite-size scalings, we show that there is a second-order transition to a low-temperature phase in which two-dimensional “sheets” form in the synthetic dimension of internal rotational or electronic states of the molecules or Rydberg atoms, respectively. Simulations for different values of the interaction V, which acts between atoms or molecules that are adjacent both in real and synthetic space, allow us to compute a phase diagram. We find a finite-temperature transition at sufficiently large V as well as a quantum phase transition—a critical value Vc below which the transition temperature vanishes.
*The work of C.H.F. and R.T.S. was supported by the grant DOE-DE-SC0014671 funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science. H.M. was supported by the Research Experience for Undergraduates program (NSF grant PHY-1852581) and by the Caltech Applied Physics Department Yariv/Blauvelt Fellowship. K.H. was supported by the Welch Foundation Grant No. C1872, the National Science Foundation Grant No. PHY1848304, and also benefited from discussions at the KITP, which was supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. NSF PHY-1748958.
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Presenters
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Chunhan Feng
- Flatiron Institute