Realizing a Fermi gas with strong long-range interactions using Rydberg dressing
ORAL
Abstract
Itinerant quantum gases with strong, long-range interactions can be used for the quantum simulation of many interesting quantum many-body phenomena including quantum magnetism, topological superfluidity and supersolidity. This has spurred the development of various experimental systems with non-local interactions including magnetic atoms and polar molecules, but reaching the regime of non-local interactions strong compared to the kinetic energy has been elusive to date. In this talk, I will present experiments where we induce such interactions in a 2D Fermi gas of lithium-6 atoms using Rydberg dressing. We achieve this by off-resonantly coupling our neutral atoms to a highly excited Rydberg state via a single-photon transition. We measure the interactions using many-body Ramsey interferometry and study the lifetime of the gas in the presence of tunneling, finding that tunneling does not reduce the lifetime. The system is approximately described by a t − V model on a square lattice where the fermions experience isotropic nearest-neighbor interactions and are free to hop only along one direction. To probe the interplay of non-local interactions with tunneling, we investigate the short-time relaxation dynamics of charge density waves in the gas. We find that strong nearest-neighbor interactions slow down the relaxation due to kinetic constraints. Our work opens the door for quantum simulations of other lattice systems with strong non-local interactions such as extended Fermi-Hubbard models.
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Publication: E. Guardado-Sanchez, B. M. Spar, P. Schauss, R. Belyansky, J. T. Young, P. Bienias, A. V. Gorshkov, T. Iadecola and W. S. Bakr, "Quench dynamics of a Fermi gas with strong long-range interactions," arXiv:2010.05871 (2020)
Presenters
Elmer Guardado-Sanchez
Princeton University
Authors
Elmer Guardado-Sanchez
Princeton University
Benjamin M Spar
Princeton University
Peter Schauss
Univ of Virginia, Virginia
Ron Belyansky
Joint Quantum Institute, NIST/University of Maryland
Jeremy T Young
JILA
Przemyslaw Bienias
University of Maryland, College Park
Alexey V Gorshkov
JQI, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Joint Quantum Institute and Joint Center for Quantum Information and Computer Science, University of Maryland and NIST, College Park, MD 20742 USA, JQI, NIST, QuICS and Department of Physics, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742;, Joint Quantum Institute, NIST/University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742 USA