English

Faraday patterns in coupled one-dimensional dipolar condensates

Quantum Gases 2012-08-24 v3 Atomic Physics Quantum Physics

Abstract

We study Faraday patterns in quasi-one-dimensional dipolar Bose-Einstein condensates with parametrically driven dipolar interactions. We show that in the presence of a roton minimum in the excitation spectrum, the emergent Faraday waves differ substantially in two- and one-dimensional geometries, providing a clear example of the key role of confinement dimensionality in dipolar gases. Moreover, Faraday patterns constitute an excellent tool to study non-local effects in polar gases, as we illustrate for two parallel quasi-one-dimensional dipolar condensates. Non-local interactions between the condensates give rise to an excitation spectrum characterized by symmetric and anti-symmetric modes, even in the absence of hopping. We show that this feature, absent in non-dipolar gases, results in a critical driving frequency at which a marked transition occurs between correlated and anti-correlated Faraday patterns in the two condensates. Interestingly, at this critical frequency, the emergent Faraday pattern stems from a spontaneous symmetry breaking mechanism.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1207.1999,
  title  = {Faraday patterns in coupled one-dimensional dipolar condensates},
  author = {Kazimierz Łakomy and Rejish Nath and Luis Santos},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1207.1999},
  year   = {2012}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T21:32:39.905Z