eugene demler harvard university

129
Eugene Demler Harvard University Strongly correlated many-body systems: from electronic materials to cold atoms to photons rators: an, R. Barnett, I. Bloch, A. Burkov, D. Chang, I. C ng, L. Duan, W. Hofstetter, A. Imambekov, V. Gritse n, G. Morigi, D. Petrov, A. Polkovnikov, A.M. Rey, er, D.-W. Wang, P. Zoller Funded by NSF, AFOSR, MURI, Harvard-MIT CUA

Upload: consuelo-azura

Post on 30-Dec-2015

46 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Strongly correlated many-body systems: from electronic materials to cold atoms to photons. Eugene Demler Harvard University. Collaborators: E. Altman, R. Barnett, I. Bloch, A. Burkov, D. Chang, I. Cirac, R. Cherng, L. Duan, W. Hofstetter, A. Imambekov, V. Gritsev, - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Eugene Demler Harvard University

Strongly correlated many-body systems: from electronic materials

to cold atoms to photons

Collaborators:E. Altman, R. Barnett, I. Bloch, A. Burkov, D. Chang, I. Cirac, R. Cherng, L. Duan, W. Hofstetter, A. Imambekov, V. Gritsev, M. Lukin, G. Morigi, D. Petrov, A. Polkovnikov, A.M. Rey, A. Turner, D.-W. Wang, P. Zoller

Funded by NSF, AFOSR, MURI, Harvard-MIT CUA

Page 2: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Strongly correlated electron systems

Page 3: Eugene Demler Harvard University

“Conventional” solid state materials

Bloch theorem for non-interacting electrons in a periodic potential

Page 4: Eugene Demler Harvard University

B

VH

I

d

First semiconductor transistor

EF

Metals

EF

Insulators andSemiconductors

Consequences of the Bloch theorem

Page 5: Eugene Demler Harvard University

“Conventional” solid state materialsElectron-phonon and electron-electron interactions are irrelevant at low temperatures

kx

ky

kF

Landau Fermi liquid theory: when frequency and temperature are smaller than EF electron systems

are equivalent to systems of non-interacting fermions

Ag Ag

Ag

Page 6: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Non Fermi liquid behavior in novel quantum materials

CeCu2Si2. Steglich et al.,

Z. Phys. B 103:235 (1997)

UCu3.5Pd1.5

Andraka, Stewart, PRB 47:3208 (93)

Violation of the Wiedemann-Franz lawin high Tc superconductorsHill et al., Nature 414:711 (2001)

Page 7: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Puzzles of high temperature superconductors

Maple, JMMM 177:18 (1998)Unusual “normal” state

Resistivity, opical conductivity,Lack of sharply defined quasiparticles,Nernst effect

Mechanism of Superconductivity

High transition temperature,retardation effect, isotope effect,role of elecron-electron and electron-phonon interactions

Competing orders

Role of magnetsim, stripes,possible fractionalization

Page 8: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Applications of quantum materials:High Tc superconductors

Page 9: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Applications of quantum materials: Ferroelectric RAM

Non-Volatile Memory

High Speed Processing

FeRAM in Smart Cards

V+ + + + + + + +

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Page 10: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Modeling strongly correlated systems using cold atoms

Page 11: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Bose-Einstein condensation

Cornell et al., Science 269, 198 (1995)

Ultralow density condensed matter system

Interactions are weak and can be described theoretically from first principles

Page 12: Eugene Demler Harvard University

New Era in Cold Atoms ResearchFocus on Systems with Strong Interactions

• Atoms in optical lattices

• Feshbach resonances

• Low dimensional systems

• Systems with long range dipolar interactions

• Rotating systems

Page 13: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Feshbach resonance and fermionic condensates Greiner et al., Nature 426:537 (2003); Ketterle et al., PRL 91:250401 (2003)

Ketterle et al.,Nature 435, 1047-1051 (2005)

Page 14: Eugene Demler Harvard University

One dimensional systems

Strongly interacting regime can be reached for low densities

One dimensional systems in microtraps.Thywissen et al., Eur. J. Phys. D. (99);Hansel et al., Nature (01);Folman et al., Adv. At. Mol. Opt. Phys. (02)

1D confinement in optical potentialWeiss et al., Science (05);Bloch et al., Esslinger et al.,

Page 15: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Atoms in optical lattices

Theory: Jaksch et al. PRL (1998)

Experiment: Kasevich et al., Science (2001); Greiner et al., Nature (2001); Phillips et al., J. Physics B (2002) Esslinger et al., PRL (2004); and many more …

Page 16: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Strongly correlated systemsAtoms in optical latticesElectrons in Solids

Simple metalsPerturbation theory in Coulomb interaction applies. Band structure methods wotk

Strongly Correlated Electron SystemsBand structure methods fail.

Novel phenomena in strongly correlated electron systems:

Quantum magnetism, phase separation, unconventional superconductivity,high temperature superconductivity, fractionalization of electrons …

Page 17: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Strongly correlated systems of photons

Page 18: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Strongly interacting photons

Page 19: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Atoms in a hollow core photonic crystal fiber

Nanoscale surface plasmons

– group velocity dispersion

3) – nonlinear susceptibility

Page 20: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Strongly interacting photons in 1-D optical waveguides

BEFORE: two level systems and insufficient mode confinement

Interaction corresponds to attraction.Physics of solitons (e.g. Drummond)

Weak non-linearity due to insufficient mode confining

Limit on non-linearity due to photon decay

NOW: EIT and tight mode confinement

Sign of the interaction can be tuned

Tight confinement of theelectromagnetic modeenhances nonlinearity

Strong non-linearity without lossescan be achieved using EIT

Fermionized photons are possible (D. Chang et al.)

Page 21: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Why are we interested in making strongly correlated systems of cold

atoms (and photons) ?

Page 22: Eugene Demler Harvard University

New Era in Cold Atoms ResearchFocus on Systems with Strong Interactions

Goals

• Resolve long standing questions in condensed matter physics (e.g. origin of high temperature superconductivity)

• Resolve matter of principle questions (e.g. existence of spin liquids in two and three dimensions)

• Study new phenomena in strongly correlated systems (e.g. coherent far from equilibrium dynamics)

Page 23: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Outline

• Introduction• Basics of cold atoms in optical lattices Bose Hubbard model. Superfluid to Mott transition. Dynamical instability.

• Two component Bose mixtures Quantum magnetism

• Fermions in optical lattices Pairing in systems with repulsive interactions. High Tc mechanism • Low-dimensional Bose systems in and out of equilibrium

Analysis of correlations beyond mean-field

Emphasis: detection and characterzation of many-body states

Page 24: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Atoms in optical lattices. Bose Hubbard model

Page 25: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Bose Hubbard model

tunneling of atoms between neighboring wells

repulsion of atoms sitting in the same well

U

t

Page 26: Eugene Demler Harvard University

4

Bose Hubbard model. Mean-field phase diagram

1n

U

02

0

M.P.A. Fisher et al.,PRB40:546 (1989)

MottN=1

N=2

N=3

Superfluid

Superfluid phase

Mott insulator phase

Weak interactions

Strong interactions

Mott

Mott

Page 27: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Set .

Bose Hubbard model

Hamiltonian eigenstates are Fock states

U

2 4

Page 28: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Bose Hubbard Model. Mean-field phase diagram

Particle-hole excitation

Mott insulator phase

41n

U

2

0

MottN=1

N=2

N=3

Superfluid

Mott

Mott

Tips of the Mott lobes

Page 29: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Gutzwiller variational wavefunction

Normalization

Interaction energy

Kinetic energy

z – number of nearest neighbors

Page 30: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Phase diagram of the 1D Bose Hubbard model. Quantum Monte-Carlo study

Batrouni and Scaletter, PRB 46:9051 (1992)

Page 31: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Extended Hubbard Model

- on site repulsion - nearest neighbor repulsion

Checkerboard phase:

Crystal phase of bosons. Breaks translational symmetry

Page 32: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Extended Hubbard model. Mean field phase diagram

van Otterlo et al., PRB 52:16176 (1995)

Hard core bosons.

Supersolid – superfluid phase with broken translational symmetry

Page 33: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Extended Hubbard model. Quantum Monte Carlo study

Sengupta et al., PRL 94:207202 (2005)

Page 34: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Dipolar bosons in optical lattices

Goral et al., PRL88:170406 (2002)

Page 35: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Bose Hubbard model away from equilibrium.Dynamical Instability of strongly interacting bosons in optical lattices

Page 36: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Moving condensate in an optical lattice. Dynamical instability

v

Theory: Niu et al. PRA (01), Smerzi et al. PRL (02)Experiment: Fallani et al. PRL (04)

Page 37: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Question: Question: How to connectHow to connect the the dynamical instabilitydynamical instability (irreversible, classical) (irreversible, classical)to the to the superfluid to Mott transitionsuperfluid to Mott transition (equilibrium, quantum) (equilibrium, quantum)

U/t

p

SF MI

???Possible experimental

sequence:

pUnstable

???

U/J

Stable

SF MI

Page 38: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Linear stability analysis: States with p> are unstable

Classical limit of the Hubbard model. Discreet Gross-Pitaevskii equation

Current carrying states

r

Dynamical instability

Amplification ofdensity fluctuations

unstableunstable

Page 39: Eugene Demler Harvard University

GP regime . Maximum of the current for .

When we include quantum fluctuations, the amplitude of the order parameter is suppressed

Dynamical instability for integer filling

decreases with increasing phase gradient

Order parameter for a current carrying state

Current

Page 40: Eugene Demler Harvard University

SF MI

p

U/J

Dynamical instability for integer filling

0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5

p*

I(p)

s(p)

sin(p)

Condensate momentum p/

Dynamical instability occurs for

Vicinity of the SF-I quantum phase transition. Classical description applies for

Page 41: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Dynamical instability. Gutzwiller approximation

0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0

d=3

d=2

d=1

unstable

stable

U/Uc

p/

Wavefunction

Time evolution

Phase diagram. Integer filling

We look for stability against small fluctuations

Altman et al., PRL 95:20402 (2005)

Page 42: Eugene Demler Harvard University

The first instability develops near the edges, where N=1

0 100 200 300 400 500

-0.2

-0.1

0.0

0.1

0.2

0.00 0.17 0.34 0.52 0.69 0.86

Cen

ter

of M

ass

Mom

entu

m

Time

N=1.5 N=3

U=0.01 tJ=1/4

Gutzwiller ansatz simulations (2D)

Optical lattice and parabolic trap. Gutzwiller approximation

Page 43: Eugene Demler Harvard University
Page 44: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Beyond semiclassical equations. Current decay by tunneling

pha

se

jpha

se

jpha

se

j

Current carrying states are metastable. They can decay by thermal or quantum tunneling

Thermal activation Quantum tunneling

Page 45: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Decay rate from a metastable state. Example

0

22 3

0

1 ( ) 0

2 c

dxS d x bx p p

m d

Page 46: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Need to consider dynamics of many degrees of freedom to describe a phase slip

A. Polkovnikov et al., Phys. Rev. A 71:063613 (2005)

Page 47: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Strong broadening of the phase transition in d=1 and d=2

is discontinuous at the transition. Phase slips are not important.Sharp phase transition

- correlation length

SF MI

p

U/J

Strongly interacting regime. Vicinity of the SF-Mott transitionDecay of current by quantum tunneling

Action of a quantum phase slip in d=1,2,3

Page 48: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Decay of current by quantum tunneling

Page 49: Eugene Demler Harvard University

0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0

d=3

d=2

d=1

unstable

stable

U/Uc

p/

Page 50: Eugene Demler Harvard University
Page 51: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Decay of current by thermal activationp

hase

j

Escape from metastable state by thermal activation

pha

se

j

Thermalphase slip

E

Page 52: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Thermally activated current decay. Weakly interacting regime

E

Activation energy in d=1,2,3

Thermal fluctuations lead to rapid decay of currents

Crossover from thermal to quantum tunneling

Thermalphase slip

Page 53: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Phys. Rev. Lett. (2004)

Decay of current by thermal fluctuations

Page 54: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Decay of current by thermal fluctuations

Experiments: Brian DeMarco et al., arXiv 0708:3074

Page 55: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Outline

• Introduction• Basics of cold atoms in optical lattices Bose Hubbard model. Superfluid to Mott transition. Dynamical instability.• Two component Bose mixtures Quantum magnetism• Fermions in optical lattices. Bose-Fermi mixtures Pairing in systems with repulsive interactions. Polarons • Low-dimensional Bose systems in and out of equilibrium Analysis of correlations beyond mean-field.

Interference experiments with low dimensional condensates

Emphasis: detection and characterzation of many-body states

Page 56: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Magnetism in condensed matter systems

Page 57: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Ferromagnetism

Magnetic memory in hard drives.Storage density of hundreds of billions bits per square inch.

Magnetic needle in a compass

Page 58: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Stoner model of ferromagnetism

Spontaneous spin polarizationdecreases interaction energybut increases kinetic energy ofelectrons

Mean-field criterion I N(0) = 1

I – interaction strengthN(0) – density of states at the Fermi level

Page 59: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Antiferromagnetism

High temperature superconductivity in cuprates is always foundnear an antiferromagnetic insulating state

Maple, JMMM 177:18 (1998)

Page 60: Eugene Demler Harvard University

( + )

Antiferromagnetism

Antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model

( - )S =

( + )t =

AF =

AF = S t

Antiferromagnetic state breaks spin symmetry. It does not have a well defined spin

Page 61: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Spin liquid states

Alternative to classical antiferromagnetic state: spin liquid states

Properties of spin liquid states:

• fractionalized excitations• topological order• gauge theory description

Systems with geometric frustration

?

Page 62: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Spin liquid behavior in systems with geometric frustration

Kagome lattice

SrCr9-xGa3+xO19

Ramirez et al. PRL (90)Broholm et al. PRL (90)Uemura et al. PRL (94)

ZnCr2O4

A2Ti2O7

Ramirez et al. PRL (02)

Pyrochlore lattice

Page 63: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Engineering magnetic systems using cold atoms in an optical lattice

Page 64: Eugene Demler Harvard University

t

t

Two component Bose mixture in optical latticeExample: . Mandel et al., Nature 425:937 (2003)

Two component Bose Hubbard model

Page 65: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Quantum magnetism of bosons in optical lattices

Duan, Demler, Lukin, PRL 91:94514 (2003)

• Ferromagnetic• Antiferromagnetic

Page 66: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Exchange Interactions in Solids

antibonding

bonding

Kinetic energy dominates: antiferromagnetic state

Coulomb energy dominates: ferromagnetic state

Page 67: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Two component Bose mixture in optical lattice.Mean field theory + Quantum fluctuations

2 nd order line

Hysteresis

1st order

Altman et al., NJP 5:113 (2003)

Page 68: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Questions:Detection of topological orderCreation and manipulation of spin liquid statesDetection of fractionalization, Abelian and non-Abelian anyonsMelting spin liquids. Nature of the superfluid state

Realization of spin liquid using cold atoms in an optical lattice Theory: Duan, Demler, Lukin PRL 91:94514 (03)

H = - Jx ix j

x - Jy iy j

y - Jz iz j

z

Kitaev model Annals of Physics 321:2 (2006)

Page 69: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Superexchange interaction in experiments with double wells

Immanuel Bloch et al.

Page 70: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Preparation and detection of Mott statesof atoms in a double well potential

Page 71: Eugene Demler Harvard University

J

J

Use magnetic field gradient to prepare a state

Observe oscillations between and states

Observation of superexchange in a double well potentialTheory: A.M. Rey et al., arXiv:0704.1413

Experiments:I. Bloch et al.

Page 72: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Comparison to the Hubbard modelExperiments: I. Bloch et al.

Page 73: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Basic Hubbard model includesonly local interaction

Extended Hubbard modeltakes into account non-localinteraction

Beyond the basic Hubbard model

Page 74: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Beyond the basic Hubbard model

Page 75: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Connecting double wells …

J’

Page 76: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Goal: observe antiferromagnetic order of cold atoms in an optical lattice!

Detection: quantum noise, using superlattice (merging two wells into one), …

Page 77: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Boson Fermion mixtures

Fermions interacting with phonons.Polarons. Competing orders

Page 78: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Boson Fermion mixtures

BEC

Experiments: ENS, Florence, JILA, MIT, ETH, Hamburg, Rice, …

Bosons provide cooling for fermionsand mediate interactions. They createnon-local attraction between fermions

Charge Density Wave Phase

Periodic arrangement of atoms

Non-local Fermion Pairing

P-wave, D-wave, …

Page 79: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Boson Fermion mixtures

“Phonons” :Bogoliubov (phase) mode

Effective fermion-”phonon” interaction

Fermion-”phonon” vertex Similar to electron-phonon systems

Page 80: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Boson Fermion mixtures in 1d optical latticesCazalila et al., PRL (2003); Mathey et al., PRL (2004)

Spinless fermions Spin ½ fermions

Note: Luttinger parameters can be determined using correlation functionmeasurements in the time of flight experiments. Altman et al. (2005)

Page 81: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Suppression of superfluidity of bosons by fermions

Fermion-Boson mixtures, see also Ospelkaus et al., cond-mat/0604179Bose-Bose mixtures, see Catani et al., arXiv:0706.278

Page 82: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Fermions

Orthogonality catastrophy for fermions. Favors Mott insulating state of bosons

Bosons

Fermions

Competing effects of fermions on bosons

Fermions provide screening. Favors SF state of bosons

Page 83: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Uc-Usuperfluid

Competing effects of fermions on bosons

0

Page 84: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Interference as a probe of low dimensional condensates

Page 85: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Interference of one dimensional condensatesExperiments: Schmiedmayer et al., Nature Physics (2005,2006)

Transverse imaging

long. imaging

trans.imaging

Longitudial imaging

Figures courtesy of J. Schmiedmayer

Page 86: Eugene Demler Harvard University

x1

d

Amplitude of interference fringes,

Interference of one dimensional condensates

For identical condensates

Instantaneous correlation function

For independent condensates Afr is finite but is random

x2

Polkovnikov, Altman, Demler, PNAS 103:6125 (2006)

Page 87: Eugene Demler Harvard University

For impenetrable bosons and

Interference between Luttinger liquids

Luttinger liquid at T=0

K – Luttinger parameter

Finite temperature

Experiments: Hofferberth,Schumm, Schmiedmayer

For non-interacting bosons and

Page 88: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Interference of two dimensional condensates

Ly

Lx

Lx

Experiments: Hadzibabic et al. Nature (2006)

Probe beam parallel to the plane of the condensates

Gati et al., PRL (2006)

Observation of the BKT transition. Talk by J. Dalibard

Page 89: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Fundamental noise in interference experiments

Amplitude of interference fringes is a quantum operator. The measured value of the amplitude will fluctuate from shot to shot. We want to characterize not only the averagebut the fluctuations as well.

Page 90: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Shot noise in interference experiments

Interference with a finite number of atoms. How well can one measure the amplitude of interference fringes in a single shot?

One atom: NoVery many atoms: ExactlyFinite number of atoms: ?

Consider higher moments of the interference fringe amplitude

, , and so on

Obtain the entire distribution function of

Page 91: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Shot noise in interference experiments

Interference of two condensates with 100 atoms in each cloud

Coherent states

Number states

Polkovnikov, Europhys. Lett. 78:10006 (1997)Imambekov, Gritsev, Demler, 2006 Varenna lecture notes, cond-mat/0703766

Page 92: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Distribution function of fringe amplitudes for interference of fluctuating condensates

L

is a quantum operator. The measured value of will fluctuate from shot to shot.

Higher moments reflect higher order correlation functions

Gritsev, Altman, Demler, Polkovnikov, Nature Physics (2006)Imambekov, Gritsev, Demler, cond-mat/0612011; c-m/0703766

We need the full distribution function of

Page 93: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Higher moments of interference amplitude

LHigher moments

Changing to periodic boundary conditions (long condensates)

Explicit expressions for are available but cumbersome Fendley, Lesage, Saleur, J. Stat. Phys. 79:799 (1995)

Method I: connection to quantum impurity model Gritsev, Polkovnikov, Altman, Demler, Nature Physics 2:705 (2006)

Page 94: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Impurity in a Luttinger liquid

Expansion of the partition function in powers of g

Partition function of the impurity contains correlation functions taken at the same point and at different times. Momentsof interference experiments come from correlations functionstaken at the same time but in different points. Euclidean invarianceensures that the two are the same

Page 95: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Relation between quantum impurity problemand interference of fluctuating condensates

Distribution function of fringe amplitudes

Distribution function can be reconstructed fromusing completeness relations for the Bessel functions

Normalized amplitude of interference fringes

Relation to the impurity partition function

Page 96: Eugene Demler Harvard University

is related to the Schroedinger equation Dorey, Tateo, J.Phys. A. Math. Gen. 32:L419 (1999) Bazhanov, Lukyanov, Zamolodchikov, J. Stat. Phys. 102:567 (2001)

Spectral determinant

Bethe ansatz solution for a quantum impurity can be obtained from the Bethe ansatz followingZamolodchikov, Phys. Lett. B 253:391 (91); Fendley, et al., J. Stat. Phys. 79:799 (95)Making analytic continuation is possible but cumbersome

Interference amplitude and spectral determinant

Page 97: Eugene Demler Harvard University
Page 98: Eugene Demler Harvard University

0 1 2 3 4

P

roba

bilit

y P

(x)

x

K=1 K=1.5 K=3 K=5

Evolution of the distribution function

Narrow distributionfor .Approaches Gumbeldistribution.

Width

Wide Poissoniandistribution for

Page 99: Eugene Demler Harvard University

When K>1, is related to Q operators of CFT with c<0. This includes 2D quantum gravity, non-intersecting loop model on 2D lattice, growth of randomfractal stochastic interface, high energy limit of multicolor QCD, …

Yang-Lee singularity

2D quantum gravity,non-intersecting loops on 2D lattice

correspond to vacuum eigenvalues of Q operators of CFT Bazhanov, Lukyanov, Zamolodchikov, Comm. Math. Phys.1996, 1997, 1999

From interference amplitudes to conformal field theories

Page 100: Eugene Demler Harvard University

How to generalize this analysis to 1d with open boundary

conditions and 2d condensates?

Page 101: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Inhomogeneous Sine-Gordon models

Bulk Sine-Gordon model Boundary Sine-Gordon model

Limiting cases

= = xx0

Page 102: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Inhomogeneous Sine-Gordon models

Expand in powers of g

Page 103: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Higher moments of interference amplitude

Higher moments

Method II: connection to generalized sine-Gordon models and random surfaces Imambekov, Gritsev, Demler, cond-mat/

Example: Interference of 2D condensates = entire condensate = observation area

Page 104: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Diagonalize Coulomb gas interaction

)()()(),(1

yxmfyxf mmm

Connection to the distribution function

Coulomb gas representation

m mmm xK

mfttxh )(

)(),( m m x

K

mfxh 2

0 )(2

)()(

Page 105: Eugene Demler Harvard University

From SG models to fluctuating surfaces

Random surfaces interpretation:

),( yxf)(xm

|f(m)|

tm “noise” variables

eigenmodes

“noise” power determined by

),( mtxh fluctuating surface

|),(| mtxh

Simulate by Monte-Carlo!

m mmm xK

mfttxh )(

)(),( m m x

K

mfxh 2

0 )(2

)()(

This method does not rely on the existence of the exact solution

Page 106: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Interference of 1d condensates at finite temperature.

Distribution function of the fringe contrast

Luttinger parameter K=5

Page 107: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Experiments: Hofferberth, Schumm, Schmiedmayer et al.

Interference of 1d condensates at finite temperature.

Distribution function of the fringe contrast

T=30nK

T=0.9m

T=60nK

T=0.45m

Page 108: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Non-equilibrium coherentdynamics of low dimensional Bose

gases probed in interference experiments

Page 109: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Studying dynamics using interference experiments

Prepare a system by splitting one condensate

Take to the regime of zero tunneling Measure time evolution

of fringe amplitudes

Page 110: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Relative phase dynamics

Hamiltonian can be diagonalized in momentum space

A collection of harmonic oscillators with

Need to solve dynamics of harmonic oscillators at finite T

Coherence

Bistrizer, Altman, PNAS (2007)Burkov, Lukin, Demler, PRL 98:200404 (2007)

Conjugate variables

Page 111: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Relative phase dynamics

High energy modes, , quantum dynamics

Combining all modes

Quantum dynamics

Classical dynamics

For studying dynamics it is important to know the initial width of the phase

Low energy modes, , classical dynamics

Page 112: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Relative phase dynamics

Quantum regime

1D systems

2D systems

Classical regime

1D systems

2D systems

Burkov, Lukin, Demler, cond-mat/0701058

Different from the earlier theoretical work based on a single mode approximation, e.g. Gardiner and Zoller, Leggett

Page 113: Eugene Demler Harvard University

1d BEC: Decay of coherence Experiments: Hofferberth, Schumm, Schmiedmayer, arXiv:0706.2259

double logarithmic plot of the coherence factor

slopes: 0.64 ± 0.08

0.67 ± 0.1

0.64 ± 0.06

get t0 from fit with fixed slope 2/3 and calculate T from

T5 = 110 ± 21

nK

T10 = 130 ± 25

nK

T15 = 170 ± 22

nK

Page 114: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Quantum dynamics of coupled condensates. Studying Sine-Gordon model in interference experiments

J

Prepare a system by splitting one condensate

Take to the regime of finitetunneling. Systemdescribed by the quantum Sine-Gordon model

Measure time evolutionof fringe amplitudes

Page 115: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Coupled 1d systems

J

Interactions lead to phase fluctuations within individual condensates

Tunneling favors aligning of the two phases

Interference experiments measure the relative phase

Page 116: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Quantum Sine-Gordon model

Quantum Sine-Gordon model is exactly integrable

Excitations of the quantum Sine-Gordon model

Hamiltonian

Imaginary time action

soliton antisoliton many types of breathers

Page 117: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Dynamics of quantum sine-Gordon model

Hamiltonian formalism

Quantum action in space-time

Initial state

Initial state provides a boundary condition at t=0

Solve as a boundary sine-Gordon model

Page 118: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Boundary sine-Gordon model

Limit enforces boundary condition

Exact solution due to Ghoshal and Zamolodchikov (93)Applications to quantum impurity problem: Fendley, Saleur, Zamolodchikov, Lukyanov,…

Sine-Gordon+ boundary condition in space

quantum impurity problem

Sine-Gordon+ boundary condition in time

two coupled 1d BEC

BoundarySine-GordonModel

space and timeenter equivalently

Page 119: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Initial state is a generalized squeezed state

creates solitons, breathers with rapidity

creates even breathers only

Matrix and are known from the exact solutionof the boundary sine-Gordon model

Time evolution

Boundary sine-Gordon model

Coherence

Matrix elements can be computed using form factor approachSmirnov (1992), Lukyanov (1997)

Page 120: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Quantum Josephson Junction

Initial state

Limit of quantum sine-Gordon model when spatial gradientsare forbidden

Time evolution

Eigenstates of the quantum Jos. junction Hamiltonian are given by Mathieu’s functions

Coherence

Page 121: Eugene Demler Harvard University

E2-E0 E4-E0

E6-E0

powerspectrum

Dynamics of quantum Josephson Junction

Main peak

Smaller peaks

“Higher harmonics”

Power spectrum

Page 122: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Dynamics of quantum sine-Gordon model

Coherence

Main peak

“Higher harmonics”

Smaller peaks

Sharp peaks

Page 123: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Dynamics of quantum sine-Gordon model

Power spectrum

Gritsev, Demler, Lukin, Polkovnikov, cond-mat/0702343

A combination ofbroad featuresand sharp peaks.Sharp peaks dueto collective many-bodyexcitations: breathers

Page 124: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Decoherence of Ramsey interferometry Interference in spin space

Page 125: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Squeezed spin states for spectroscopy

Generation of spin squeezing using interactions.Two component BEC. Single mode approximation

Motivation: improved spectroscopy. Wineland et. al. PRA 50:67 (1994)

Kitagawa, Ueda, PRA 47:5138 (1993)

Page 126: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Interaction induced collapse of Ramsey fringes

Experiments in 1d tubes: A. Widera, I. Bloch et al.

time

Ramsey fringe visibility

- volume of the system

Page 127: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Spin echo. Time reversal experiments

No revival?

Expts: A. Widera, I. Bloch et al.

In the single mode approximation

Related earlier theoretical work: Kuklov et al., cond-mat/0106611

Page 128: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Interaction induced collapse of Ramsey fringes.Multimode analysis

Bosonized Hamiltonian (Luttinger liquid approach)

Changing the sign of the interaction reverses the interaction part of the Hamiltonian but not the kinetic energy

Experiments done in array of tubes. Strong fluctuations in 1d systems

Time dependent harmonic oscillatorscan be analyzed exactly

Page 129: Eugene Demler Harvard University

Theory: Luttinger liquid analysisGritsev, Lukin, Demler

Interaction induced collapse of Ramsey fringesin one dimensional systems

Fundamental limit on Ramsey interferometry

Experiments in 1d tubes: A. Widera, I. Bloch et al.