Interaction-Driven Spin Rotations in a Two-component BEC Reflecting from a Barrier
ORAL
Abstract
Reflection from a barrier perturbed by weak Raman coupling beams generates spin waves in a BEC of 87Rb. Due to the coincidence of scattering lengths in 87Rb, a BEC in a mixture of two hyperfine states behaves as a phase-coherent yet distinguishable two-component fluid. Reflection from the barrier creates a counter-propagating matter wave with spin partly transverse to the spin of the forward-going wave, initiating interaction-driven rotations. The observed spin rotations are well-described by mean-field simulations with equal inter and intra-spin interaction strengths, demonstrating that the spin dynamics do not arise from nonequilibrium dynamics caused by spin-dependent interactions or immiscibility of the two components. Rather, the driving mechanism for spin rotations is the different interaction energy experienced by parallel versus anti-parallel spins in different spatial modes, much in the same way the identical spin rotation effect is known to generate spin waves in non-condensed gases. We observe one oscillation of a spin wave for low Rabi frequencies and study the transition where spin rotations become independent of the external coupling and instead are dominated by the interaction-driven effects.
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Publication: D. C. Spierings and A. M. Steinberg. Observation of the Decrease of Larmor Tunneling Times with Lower Incident Energy. Physical Review Letters, 127(13), 133001 (2021).<br>D. C. Spierings, J. H. Thywissen, and A. M. Steinberg. Interaction-Driven Spin Rotations in a Two-component BEC Reflecting from a Barrier. (in preparation).
Presenters
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David C Spierings
Univ of Toronto
Authors
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David C Spierings
Univ of Toronto
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Joseph McGowan IV
Univ of Toronto
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Nicholas Mantella
Univ of Toronto
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Joseph H Thywissen
Univ of Toronto, University of Toronto, Toronto
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Aephraim M Steinberg
Univ of Toronto