Title: Dipolar Fermi Gases
1 Dipolar Fermi Gases
Han Pu Rice University
- In collaboration with
- Cheng Zhao, Lei Jiang, Xunxu Liu
- Takahiko Miyakawa (Aichi Univ. of Education)
- Su Yi (ITP, Chinese Academy of Sci.)
2Dipolar interaction between two atoms
(Polarized dipole)
- Long ranged (1/R3)
- Anisotropic
3Polar molecule as dipolar fermions
40K 87Rb
Large electric dipole moment 0.57 Debye
(singlet) Dipolar interaction 100 times larger
than in 52Cr
4Model
N spin polarized (along z-axis) fermions
Interacting with each other via the dipolar
interaction
5Semiclassical variational approach
PRA 77, 061603(R) (2008) New J. Phys. 11, 055017
(2009)
Choose the proper f that minimizes the total
energy
6Total energy
Goal minimize the total energy Strategy treat
the Wigner function variationally
7Homogeneous case Wigner function
8Homogeneous case energies
Kinetic energy favors an isotropic Fermi surface
(a 1) Fock energy tends to stretch the Fermi
surface along z-axis (a 0) Competition b/w the
two results in a prolate Fermi surface (0lt a lt1).
9Homogeneous case stability
unstable
stable
Sufficiently large dipolar strength leads to
collapse.
10Inhomogeneous case Wigner function
Similar treatment by Goral et al. in PRA 63,
033606 (2001), but with a1.
11Inhomogeneous case energies
Interaction energy is not bounded from below
(dipolar interaction is partially
attractive). The system is not absolutely stable
against collapse (? ? 8).
A local minimum may exist the system may sustain
a metastable state.
12Density profiles
Real space
Momentum space
13Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov Thoery dipolar superfluid
14Self-consistent solution
0
Renormalization of gap equation Baranov et al.,
PRA 66, 013606 (2002)
15Normal state
Cdd1.096
HFB
Var.
16Superfluid state
Momentum distribution
Order parameter
kz
k?
17Angular distribution of order parameter
Order parameter
kz
k?
18Polar molecules as a high Tc superfluid
Baranov et al., PRA 2002)
19Possible quantum phases?
Biaxial nemetic phase
Fregoso et al., NJP (2009)
Charge density wave
Preliminary results from Miyakawa
20Conclusion
- Dipolar interaction deforms the density
distribution of quantum Fermi gas in both real
and momentum space. - Dipolar interaction induces superfluid pairing
and other potential quantum phases.