- Having the cake and seeing it too
In Situ Observation of Incompressible Mott Insulating
Domains in Ultracold Gases
Cheng Chin
cchin@uchicago.edu
James Franck institute and Department of Physics,
University of Chicago, IL 60637
Abstract:
Bose-Hubbard model describes one of the simplest realizations of
a quantum phase transition, a phase transition that occurs even
at zero temperature [1]. Near the phase boundary (critical point),
quantum criticality, resembling that of Ising-type magnetics in
higher dimensions, is expected to emerge with a full universal
behavior. In particular, fluctuations and correlations are expected
at all length scales.
Our observation of atomic density profiles in optical lattices
provides a powerful tool to determine all relevant thermo-dynamical
quantities, as well as density fluctuations and density-density
correlations [2]. I will describe our efforts to identify the
superfluid-Mott insulator phase boundary, to extract quantum
fluctuations and correlations, and also discuss the prospects to
identify and characterize quantum criticality and critical
universality based on trapped quantum gases in an optical lattice.
References:
[1] Quantum phase transition from a superfluid to a Mott insulator in a
gas of ultracold atoms, M. Greiner, O. Mandel, T. Esslinger, T. W.
Hänsch, and I. Bloch, Nature 415, 39 (2002).
[2] In situ observation of incompressible Mott-insulating domains in
ultracold atomic gases, N. Gemelke, X. Zhang, C.-L. Hung, and C. Chin,
Nature 460, 995 (2009).