Formation and characterization of matter-wave soliton breathers
POSTER
Abstract
Solitons are non-dispersive wave packets which arise as solutions to the 1D nonlinear Schrodinger equation (NLSE). Due to the integrability of the NLSE, higher-order solitons, known as breathers, can be formed from fundamental solitons by a specific interaction quench. A n-soliton breather is composed of constituent solitons of mass ratios 1:3:...:2n-1, and is formed when the attractive interactions are quenched by a factor of n2, where n is an integer. A breather’s density profile oscillates in time at a frequency determined by the chemical potential difference of its constituent solitons. While the relative velocity and positions of the solitons are conserved quantities in the mean-field (MF) limit, quantum manybody theory predicts that quantum fluctuations break integrability and lead to breather dissociation1,2. In this work, we form solitons from a Bose-Einstein Condensate of 7Li atoms in a quasi-1D harmonic potential formed by a focused laser beam. Breathers are formed following an interaction quench controlled through the Feshbach resonance. We observe density profiles of 2- and 3-soliton breathers, and characterize their breathing frequencies with respect to atom number and confinement aspect ratio. Our findings agree well with a quasi-1D MF theory. We report the progress made towards observing breather dissociation.
1V. A. Yurovsky et al., PRL 119, 220401 (2017)
2O.V. Marchukov et. al, Phys. Rev. Lett. 125, 050405 (2020)
1V. A. Yurovsky et al., PRL 119, 220401 (2017)
2O.V. Marchukov et. al, Phys. Rev. Lett. 125, 050405 (2020)
Publication: D. Luo et al, PRL 125,183902 (2020)
Presenters
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Yi Jin
Rice University, Rice Univ
Authors
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Yi Jin
Rice University, Rice Univ
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De Luo
Rice University, JQI, Rice Univ
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Ricardo Espinoza
Rice University, Rice Univ
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Randall G Hulet
Rice University, Rice Univ, Rice
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Vladimir Yurovsky
Tel Aviv University
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Boris Malomed
Tel Aviv University
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Oleksandr Marchukov
Technical University of Darmstadt, Technische Universitat Darmstadt
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Vanja Dunjko
Umass
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Maxim Olshanii
Umass