Universality in ultra-cold fermionic atom gases - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Universality in ultra-cold fermionic atom gases

Description:

Universality in ultra-cold fermionic atom gases. Universality ... Partridge et al. 6Li. method. effective action. includes all quantum and thermal fluctuations ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:56
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 89
Provided by: cwett
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Universality in ultra-cold fermionic atom gases


1
Universality in ultra-cold fermionic atom gases
2
Universality in ultra-cold fermionic atom gases
  • with
  • S. Diehl , H.Gies , J.Pawlowski

3
BEC BCS crossover
  • Bound molecules of two atoms
  • on microscopic scale
  • Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC ) for low T
  • Fermions with attractive interactions
  • (molecules play no role )
  • BCS superfluidity at low T
  • by condensation of Cooper pairs
  • Crossover by Feshbach resonance
  • as a transition in terms of external magnetic
    field

4
microphysics
  • determined by interactions between two atoms
  • length scale atomic scale

5
Feshbach resonance
H.Stoof
6
scattering length
BCS
BEC
7
many body physics
  • dilute gas of ultra-cold atoms
  • length scale distance between atoms

8
chemical potential
BCS
BEC
inverse scattering length
9
BEC BCS crossover
  • qualitative and partially quantitative
    theoretical understanding
  • mean field theory (MFT ) and first attempts beyond

concentration c a kF reduced chemical
potential s µ/eF Fermi momemtum
kF Fermi energy eF binding energy
T 0
BCS
BEC
10
concentration
  • c a kF , a(B) scattering length
  • needs computation of density nkF3/(3p2)

dilute
dilute
dense
non- interacting Fermi gas
non- interacting Bose gas
T 0
BCS
BEC
11
universality
  • same curve for Li and K atoms ?

dilute
dilute
dense
T 0
BCS
BEC
12
different methods
Quantum Monte Carlo
13
who cares about details ?
  • a theorists game ?

MFT
RG
14
a theorists dream
  • reliable method for strongly interacting fermions
  • solving fermionic quantum field theory

15
experimental precision tests are crucial !
16
precision many body theory- quantum field theory
-
  • so far
  • particle physics perturbative calculations
  • magnetic moment of electron
  • g/2 1.001 159 652 180 85 ( 76 ) (
    Gabrielse et al. )
  • statistical physics universal critical
    exponents for second order phase transitions ?
    0.6308 (10)
  • renormalization group
  • lattice simulations for bosonic systems in
    particle and statistical physics ( e.g. QCD )

17
QFT with fermions
  • needed
  • universal theoretical tools for complex
    fermionic systems
  • wide applications
  • electrons in solids ,
  • nuclear matter in neutron stars , .

18
problems
19
(1) bridge from microphysics to macrophysics
20
(2) different effective degrees of freedom
  • microphysics single atoms
  • ( molecules on BEC side )
  • macrophysics bosonic collective degrees of
    freedom
  • compare QCD from quarks and gluons to mesons
    and hadrons

21
(3) no small coupling
22
ultra-cold atoms
  • microphysics known
  • coupling can be tuned
  • for tests of theoretical methods these are
    important advantages as compared to solid state
    physics !

23
challenge for ultra-cold atoms
  • Non-relativistic fermion systems with
    precision
  • similar to particle physics !
  • ( QCD with quarks )

24
functional renormalization group
  • conceived to cope with the above problems
  • should be tested by ultra-cold atoms

25
QFT for non-relativistic fermions
  • functional integral, action

perturbation theory Feynman rules
t euclidean time on torus with circumference
1/T s effective chemical potential
26
variables
  • ? Grassmann variables
  • f bosonic field with atom number two
  • What is f ?
  • microscopic molecule,
  • macroscopic Cooper pair ?
  • All !

27
parameters
  • detuning ?(B)
  • Yukawa or Feshbach coupling hf

28
fermionic action
  • equivalent fermionic action , in general not local

29
scattering length a
a M ?/4p
  • broad resonance pointlike limit
  • large Feshbach coupling

30
parameters
  • Yukawa or Feshbach coupling hf
  • scattering length a
  • broad resonance hf drops out

31
concentration c
32
(No Transcript)
33
universality
  • Are these parameters enough for a quantitatively
    precise description ?
  • Have Li and K the same crossover when described
    with these parameters ?
  • Long distance physics looses memory of detailed
    microscopic properties of atoms and molecules !
  • universality for c-1 0 Ho,( valid for
    broad resonance)
  • here whole crossover range

34
analogy with particle physics
  • microscopic theory not known -
  • nevertheless macroscopic theory
    characterized by a finite number of
  • renormalizable couplings
  • me , a g w , g s , M w ,
  • here c , hf ( only c for broad
    resonance )

35
analogy with universal critical exponents
  • only one relevant parameter
  • T - Tc

36
universality
  • issue is not that particular Hamiltonian with two
    couplings ? , hf gives good approximation to
    microphysics
  • large class of different microphysical
    Hamiltonians lead to a macroscopic behavior
    described only by ? , hf
  • difference in length scales matters !

37
units and dimensions
  • c 1 h 1 kB 1
  • momentum length-1 mass eV
  • energies 2ME (momentum)2
  • ( M atom mass )
  • typical momentum unit Fermi momentum
  • typical energy and temperature unit Fermi
    energy
  • time (momentum) -2
  • canonical dimensions different from relativistic
    QFT !

38
rescaled action
  • M drops out
  • all quantities in units of kF , eF if

39
what is to be computed ?
  • Inclusion of fluctuation effects
  • via functional integral
  • leads to effective action.
  • This contains all relevant information for
    arbitrary T and n !

40
effective action
  • integrate out all quantum and thermal
    fluctuations
  • quantum effective action
  • generates full propagators and vertices
  • richer structure than classical action

41
effective potential
  • minimum determines order parameter
  • condensate fraction

Oc 2 ?0/n
42
renormalized fields and couplings
43
resultsfrom functional renormalization group
44
condensate fraction
T 0
BCS
BEC
45
gap parameter
?
T 0
BCS
BEC
46
limits
BCS for gap
Bosons with scattering length 0.9 a
47
Yukawa coupling
T 0
48
temperature dependence of condensate
49
condensate fraction second order phase
transition
c -1 1
free BEC
c -1 0
universal critical behavior
T/Tc
50
crossover phase diagram
51
shift of BEC critical temperature
52
correlation length
? kF
three values of c
(T-Tc)/Tc
53
universality
54
universality for broad resonances
  • for large Yukawa couplings hf
  • only one relevant parameter c
  • all other couplings are strongly attracted to
    partial fixed points
  • macroscopic quantities can be predicted
  • in terms of c and T/eF
  • ( in suitable range for c-1 density sets
    scale )

55
universality for narrow resonances
  • Yukawa coupling becomes additional parameter
  • ( marginal coupling )
  • also background scattering important

56
bare molecule fraction(fraction of microscopic
closed channel molecules )
  • not all quantities are universal
  • bare molecule fraction involves wave function
    renormalization that depends on value of Yukawa
    coupling

6Li
Experimental points by Partridge et al.
BG
57
method
58
effective action
  • includes all quantum and thermal fluctuations
  • formulated here in terms of renormalized fields
  • involves renormalized couplings

59
effective potential
  • value of f at potential minimum
  • order parameter , determines condensate
    fraction
  • second derivative of U with respect to f yields
    correlation length
  • derivative with respect to s yields density

60
functional renormalization group
  • make effective action depend on scale k
  • include only fluctuations with momenta larger
    than k
  • ( or with distance from Fermi-surface larger
    than k )
  • k large no fluctuations , classical action
  • k ? 0 quantum effective action
  • effective average action ( same for effective
    potential )
  • running couplings

61
microscope with variable resolution
62
running couplings crucial for universality
  • for large Yukawa couplings hf
  • only one relevant parameter c
  • all other couplings are strongly attracted to
    partial fixed points
  • macroscopic quantities can be predicted
  • in terms of c and T/eF
  • ( in suitable range for c-1 )

63
running potential
micro
macro
here for scalar theory
64
physics at different length scales
  • microscopic theories where the laws are
    formulated
  • effective theories where observations are made
  • effective theory may involve different degrees of
    freedom as compared to microscopic theory
  • example microscopic theory only for fermionic
    atoms , macroscopic theory involves bosonic
    collective degrees of freedom ( f )

65
Functional Renormalization Group
  • describes flow of effective action from small to
    large length scales
  • perturbative renormalization case where only
    couplings change , and couplings are small

66
conclusions
  • the challenge of precision
  • substantial theoretical progress needed
  • phenomenology has to identify quantities that
    are accessible to precision both for experiment
    and theory
  • dedicated experimental effort needed

67
challenges for experiment
  • study the simplest system
  • identify quantities that can be measured with
    precision of a few percent and have clear
    theoretical interpretation
  • precise thermometer that does not destroy probe
  • same for density

68
functional renormalization group
Wegner, Houghton
/
69
effective average action
here only for bosons , addition of fermions
straightforward
70
Flow equation for average potential
contribution from fermion fluctuations
71
Simple one loop structure nevertheless (almost)
exact
72
Infrared cutoff
73
Partial differential equation for function U(k,f)
depending on two variables
Z k c k-?
74
Regularisation
  • For suitable Rk
  • Momentum integral is ultraviolet and infrared
    finite
  • Numerical integration possible
  • Flow equation defines a regularization scheme (
    ERGE regularization )

75
Integration by momentum shells
  • Momentum integral
  • is dominated by
  • q2 k2 .
  • Flow only sensitive to
  • physics at scale k

76
Wave function renormalization and anomalous
dimension
  • for Zk (f,q2) flow equation is exact !

77
Flow of effective potential
  • Ising model

CO2
Critical exponents
Experiment
T 304.15 K p 73.8.bar ? 0.442 g cm-2
S.Seide
78
Critical exponents , d3
ERGE world
ERGE world
79
Solution of partial differential equation
yields highly nontrivial non-perturbative
results despite the one loop structure
! Example Kosterlitz-Thouless phase transition
80
Exact renormalization group equation
81
end
82
Effective average actionand exact
renormalization group equation
83
Generating functional
84
Effective average action
Loop expansion perturbation theory
with infrared cutoff in propagator
85
Quantum effective action
86
Truncations
  • Functional differential equation
  • cannot be solved exactly
  • Approximative solution by truncation of
  • most general form of effective action

87
Exact flow equation for effective potential
  • Evaluate exact flow equation for homogeneous
    field f .
  • R.h.s. involves exact propagator in homogeneous
    background field f.

88
two body limit ( vacuum )
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com