Quantum phases from competing short- and long-range interactions in an optical lattice
Autor: | Renate Landig, Manuele Landini, Lorenz Hruby, Rafael Mottl, Tobias Donner, Tilman Esslinger, Nishant Dogra |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
Quantum phase transition
Physics Condensed Matter::Quantum Gases Optical lattice Multidisciplinary Condensed matter physics Cavity quantum electrodynamics FOS: Physical sciences Quantum simulator Quantum phases 01 natural sciences 3. Good health 010305 fluids & plasmas Supersolid Quantum Gases (cond-mat.quant-gas) 0103 physical sciences 010306 general physics Condensed Matter - Quantum Gases Jaynes–Cummings–Hubbard model Lattice model (physics) |
Zdroj: | Nature |
Popis: | Insights into complex phenomena in quantum matter can be gained from simulation experiments with ultracold atoms, especially in cases where theoretical characterization is challenging. However these experiments are mostly limited to short-range collisional interactions. Recently observed perturbative effects of long-range interactions were too weak to reach novel quantum phases. Here we experimentally realize a bosonic lattice model with competing short- and infinite-range interactions, and observe the appearance of four distinct phases - a superfluid, a supersolid, a Mott insulator and a charge density wave. Our system is based on an atomic quantum gas trapped in an optical lattice inside a high finesse optical cavity. The strength of the short-ranged on-site interactions is controlled by means of the optical lattice depth. The infinite-range interaction potential is mediated by a vacuum mode of the cavity and is independently controlled by tuning the cavity resonance. When probing the phase transition between the Mott insulator and the charge density wave in real-time, we discovered a behaviour characteristic of a first order phase transition. Our measurements have accessed a regime for quantum simulation of many-body systems, where the physics is determined by the intricate competition between two different types of interactions and the zero point motion of the particles. 11 pages, 11 figures |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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