English

Efimov trimers under strong confinement

Quantum Gases 2014-08-04 v2 Other Condensed Matter

Abstract

The dimensionality of a system can fundamentally impact the behaviour of interacting quantum particles. Classic examples range from the fractional quantum Hall effect to high temperature superconductivity. As a general rule, one expects confinement to favour the binding of particles. However, attractively interacting bosons apparently defy this expectation: while three identical bosons in three dimensions can support an infinite tower of Efimov trimers, only two universal trimers exist in the two dimensional case. We reveal how these two limits are connected by investigating the problem of three identical bosons confined by a harmonic potential along one direction. We show that the confinement breaks the discrete Efimov scaling symmetry and destroys the weakest bound trimers. However, the deepest bound Efimov trimer persists under strong confinement and hybridizes with the quasi-two-dimensional trimers, yielding a superposition of trimer configurations that effectively involves tunnelling through a short-range repulsive barrier. Our results suggest a way to use strong confinement to engineer more stable Efimov-like trimers, which have so far proved elusive.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1402.1859,
  title  = {Efimov trimers under strong confinement},
  author = {Jesper Levinsen and Pietro Massignan and Meera M. Parish},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1402.1859},
  year   = {2014}
}

Comments

8 pages, 4 figures. Typos corrected, published version

R2 v1 2026-06-22T03:04:05.358Z