Superfluidity and phase transitions in a resonant Bose gas
Abstract
The atomic Bose gas is studied across a Feshbach resonance, mapping out its phase diagram, and computing its thermodynamics and excitation spectra. It is shown that such a degenerate gas admits two distinct atomic and molecular superfluid phases, with the latter distinguished by the absence of atomic off-diagonal long-range order, gapped atomic excitations, and deconfined atomic pi-vortices. The properties of the molecular superfluid are explored, and it is shown that across a Feshbach resonance it undergoes a quantum Ising transition to the atomic superfluid, where both atoms and molecules are condensed. In addition to its distinct thermodynamic signatures and deconfined half-vortices, in a trap a molecular superfluid should be identifiable by the absence of an atomic condensate peak and the presence of a molecular one.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0711.0425,
title = {Superfluidity and phase transitions in a resonant Bose gas},
author = {Leo Radzihovsky and Peter B. Weichman and Jae I. Park},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0711.0425},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
55 pages, 18 eps figures, submitted to Annals of Physics