APS Logo

Relaxation of a Single Dopant in a 2D Antiferromagnetic Insulator: Interplay of Tunneling and Superexchange

POSTER

Abstract

The interplay between spin and density underlies much of the emergent phenomena in the doped Hubbard model, including bad metallic phases and possibly d-wave superfluidity. Quantum simulation of the Hubbard model using quantum gas microscopy offers site-resolved readout and manipulation, enabling detailed exploration of the relationship between density and spin. Here we report on the time- and position-resolved dynamics of a single hole in a 2D Hubbard insulator with short-range antiferromagnetic correlations using a cold-atom quantum simulator of about 400 sites. We observe an initial hole expansion determined by the tunnelling rate, followed by a slowdown that strongly depends on the spin exchange energy instead. Concurrent measurements of the spin correlations reveal a dynamical dressing of the hole by its spin environment, indicating the formation and spreading of a magnetic polaron. This work enables the study of out-of-equilibrium emergent phenomena in the Fermi-Hubbard model, one dopant at a time.

Publication: G. Ji et al., `Coupling a mobile hole to an antiferromagnetic spin background: transient dynamics of a magnetic polaron', arXiv:2006.06672

Presenters

  • Lev H Kendrick

    Harvard University

Authors

  • Lev H Kendrick

    Harvard University

  • Geoffrey Ji

    Harvard University

  • Muqing Xu

    Harvard University

  • Anant Kale

    Caltech, Harvard University

  • Christie S Chiu

    Princeton University

  • Justus Bruggenjurgen

    Harvard University

  • Daniel Greif

    Harvard University

  • Annabelle Bohrdt

    Tech Univ Muenchen, Technical University Munich

  • Fabian Grusdt

    Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU-Munich), Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU-Mun, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich

  • Eugene Demler

    Harvard University

  • Martin Lebrat

    Harvard University, Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA

  • Markus Greiner

    Harvard University