Frustration and Kinetic Magnetism in a Cold-Atom Quantum Simulator

ORAL

Abstract

We present recent experimental advances in the quantum simulation of strongly correlated materials with ultracold fermions, revealing emergent magnetic states in a Hubbard model with tunable geometric frustration and doping. Using an optical lattice that transitions from a square to a triangular geometry, we observe the transformation of a Néel antiferromagnet into a short-range 120° spiral state at half-filling due to frustration. Beyond half-filling, antiferromagnetic correlations strengthen with hole dopants but intriguingly reverse to ferromagnetic with particle dopants. By measuring three-point dopant-spin-spin correlations, we uncover the emergence of ferromagnetic polarons, offering the first cold-atom observation of Nagaoka ferromagnetism. Our work provides insights into kinetic magnetism, akin to observations in twisted TMD bilayers, and opens new avenues for exploring dopant pairing mediated by frustration.

*We acknowledge funding from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, NSF, ONR, DOE, ARO, AFOSR, QuEra, Swiss National Science Foundation, Max Planck/Harvard Research Center for Quantum Optics, and MICIN.

Publication: [1] M. Xu, L. H. Kendrick, A. Kale, Y. Gang, G. Ji, R.T. Scalettar, M. Lebrat, M. Greiner, Nature 620, 971 (2023)
[2] M. Lebrat*, M. Xu*, L. H. Kendrick, A. Kale, Y. Gang, P. Seetharaman, I. Morera, E. Khatami, E. Demler, M. Greiner, arXiv:2308.12269

Presenters

  • Martin Lebrat

    • Harvard University

Authors

  • Martin Lebrat

    • Harvard University
  • Muqing Xu

    • Harvard University
  • Lev H Kendrick

    • Harvard University
  • Anant Kale

    • Harvard University
  • Youqi Gang

    • Harvard University
  • Geoffrey Ji

    • Harvard University
  • Richard T Scalettar

    • University of California, Davis
  • Pranav Seetharaman

    • San Jose State University
  • Ivan Morera

    • Universitat de Barcelona
    • University of Barcelona
  • Ehsan Khatami

    • San Jose State University
  • Eugene Demler

    • ETH
    • ETH Zurich
    • ETH Zürich
    • Institute for Theoretical Physics, ETH Zürich, 8093, Zürich, Switzerland
  • Markus Greiner

    • Harvard University