1 / 30

Tunable Molecular Many-Body Physics and the Hyperfine Molecular Hubbard Hamiltonian

Tunable Molecular Many-Body Physics and the Hyperfine Molecular Hubbard Hamiltonian. Michael L. Wall Department of Physics Colorado School of Mines in collaboration with Lincoln D. Carr. Motivation: Ultracold atoms in optical lattices. Trapping in optical potential

munin
Télécharger la présentation

Tunable Molecular Many-Body Physics and the Hyperfine Molecular Hubbard Hamiltonian

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tunable Molecular Many-Body Physics and the Hyperfine Molecular Hubbard Hamiltonian Michael L. Wall Department of Physics Colorado School of Mines in collaboration with Lincoln D. Carr

  2. Motivation: Ultracold atoms in optical lattices • Trapping in optical potential • Optical potential couples to dynamical polarizability of object • Simple 2-state picture: AC Stark effect • Potential proportional to intensity • Extremely tunable interactions • Over 8 orders of magnitude! • Repulsive or attractive • PRL 102 090402

  3. The Bose-Hubbard Model Field operator Hopping • Excellent approximation for deep lattices! • Accounts for SF-MI transition • Simplest nontrivial bosonic lattice model Interaction

  4. Diatomic Molecules • 3 energy scales • Electronic potential • Vibrational excitations • Rotational excitations • Rough scaling based on powers of m_e/M_N • At ultracold temps neglect all except for rotational terms

  5. Rb K Focus on Heteronuclear Alkali Dimers • No spin or orbital angular momentum: • Rotational energy scale determined by B~GHz • Heteronuclear->permanent dipole moment d~1D • Dynamical polarizability is anisotropic

  6. Experimental setup

  7. Internal structure • Rotational Hamiltonian • Integer Angular momenta • Linear level spacing • Spherical Symmetry • Nuclear Quadrupole • Diagonal in F=N+I • Mixing of rotational/nuclear spin states • Parameters taken from DFT/experiment • Hyperfine Hamiltonian • Lots of terms, most small • Nuclear Quadrupole dominates

  8. External Fields • Stark effect • Breaks rotational symmetry • Couples N->N+1 • Dipole moments induced along field direction • 1D~0.5 GHz/(kV/cm) • Zeeman effect • Rotational coupling-small • Nuclear spin coupling-large • New handle on system

  9. Dipolar control • Separation of dipolar and hyperfine degrees of freedom • Selection rule for nuclear spin projection along E-field • Dipole strongly couples to E field, insensitive to B field • Reverse for Nuclear spin-rotate using B field • Dipole character “smeared” across many states E E B B

  10. What does the dipole get us? • Resonant dipole-dipole interaction • Anisotropic and long range • Dominates rethermalization via inelastic collisions • Ultracold chemistry->bad news for us! • Stabilize using DC field and reduced geometry • Coupling to AC microwave fields • Dynamics! • Easy access to internal states PRA 76 043604 (2007)

  11. Optical lattice effects • Dynamical polarizability is anisotropic • Reducible rank-2 tensor • Write in terms of irreducible rank-0 and rank-2 components • Tunneling depends on rotational mode • Different “effective mass” Put this all together…

  12. The Hyperfine Molecular Hubbard Hamiltonian • Energy offsets from single particle spectra • Tunneling dependent on rotational mode • Nearest neighbor Dipole-Dipole interactions • Transitions between states from AC driving • Wall and Carr PRA 82 013611 (2010)

  13. Applications 1: Internal state dependence • No AC field->Extended Bose-Hubbard model • Studies of quantum phase equilibria • Dynamics of interactions between phases

  14. Applications 2: Quantum dephasing • Exponential envelope on Rabi oscillations • Purely many-body in nature • Emergent timescale

  15. Applications 3: Tunable complexity • Many interacting degrees of freedom • Can dynamically alter the number and timescale • Interplay of spatial and internal dof->Emergence • “Quantum complexity simulator” • Quantitative discussion in the works

  16. Conclusions/Further research • Cold atoms are great “quantum simulators” • Molecules have interesting new structure that can be controlled • Emergent behavior, complexity simulator • Future work will quantify complexity, study different molecular species, include loss terms related to chemistry, study dissipative quantum phase transitions, etc. • Wall and Carr PRA 82 013611 (2010) • Wall and Carr NJP 11 055027 (2009)

  17. Stark Spectra

  18. Experimental Progress • Molecules at edge of quantum degeneracy • 87Rb-40K, JILA • Absolute ground state • STIRAP procedure • Hyperfine state is important! • A single hyperfine state is populated • Can be chosen via experimental cleverness http://jila.colorado.edu/yelabs/research/cold.html http://physics.aps.org/viewpoint-for/10.1103/PhysRevLett.101.133005

  19. How do we simulate such a Hamiltonian? • We want to solve the Schroedinger eqn. • Question: How big is Hilbert space? • Answer 1: Big • Exponential scaling->exact diagonalization difficult • Answer 2: Too big • Finite range Hamiltonians can’t move states “very far” • All eigenstates of such Hamiltonians live on a tiny submanifold of full Hilbert space • In 1D, restate as: critical entanglement bounded by • Perform variational optimization in class of states with restricted entanglement->”Entanglement compression”

  20. Time-Evolving Block Decimation • Variational method in the class of Matrix Product States • Polynomial scaling • Find ground states of nearest-neighbor Hamiltonians • Simulate time evolution (still difficult) • Google “Open source tebd” • Original paper G. Vidal PRL 91 147902 (2003) • What does it say about HMHH?

  21. Hubbard Parameters • Choose appropriate Wannier basis, compute overlaps Hopping Internal energy Transitions Interaction

  22. Route I: Single and many molecule physics decoupled Ns = 2 E B DC Ground state structure DC+AC Ground state structure Dynamics

  23. Decoupled: Entanglement and structure factors Ns = 2 E B

  24. Now couple single to many molecule physics Ns = 2 E B DC Ground state structure DC+AC Ground state structure Dynamics

  25. Coupled: Entanglement and Structure Factors Ns = 2 E B

  26. Route II: Turning on Internal State Structure Ns = 4 E B DC Ground state structure DC+AC Ground state structure Dynamics

  27. Entanglement and Structure Factor Ns = 4 E B

  28. Route II.3 Ns = 4 E B DC Ground state structure DC+AC Ground state structure Dynamics

  29. Route II.4 Ns = 4 E B

  30. Physical Scales for this Problem

More Related