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An optical lattice with sound

Authors :
Ronen M. Kroeze
Yudan Guo
Sarang Gopalakrishnan
Brendan P. Marsh
Jonathan Keeling
Benjamin Lev
University of St Andrews. School of Physics and Astronomy
University of St Andrews. Centre for Designer Quantum Materials
University of St Andrews. Condensed Matter Physics
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
arXiv, 2021.

Abstract

Quantised sound waves -- phonons -- govern the elastic response of crystalline materials, and also play an integral part in determining their thermodynamic properties and electrical response (e.g., by binding electrons into superconducting Cooper pairs). The physics of lattice phonons and elasticity is absent in simulators of quantum solids constructed of neutral atoms in periodic light potentials: unlike real solids, traditional optical lattices are silent because they are infinitely stiff. Optical-lattice realisations of crystals therefore lack some of the central dynamical degrees of freedom that determine the low-temperature properties of real materials. Here, we create an optical lattice with phonon modes using a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) coupled to a confocal optical resonator. Playing the role of an active quantum gas microscope, the multimode cavity QED system both images the phonons and induces the crystallisation that supports phonons via short-range, photon-mediated atom-atom interactions. Dynamical susceptibility measurements reveal the phonon dispersion relation, showing that these collective excitations exhibit a sound speed dependent on the BEC-photon coupling strength. Our results pave the way for exploring the rich physics of elasticity in quantum solids, ranging from quantum melting transitions to exotic ``fractonic'' topological defects in the quantum regime.<br />Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures; supplement with 22 pages, 6 figures

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7a41126ef04f1eef6c0cae495aae8d54
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2104.13922