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Fermionic superfluids in two and three dimensions

ORAL · Invited

Abstract

Understanding the origins of unconventional superconductivity has been a major focus of condensed matter physics for many decades. While many questions remain unanswered, experiments have found the highest critical temperatures in layered two-dimensional materials. However, to what extent the remarkable stability of these strongly correlated 2D superfluids is affected by their reduced dimensionality is still an open question. Here, I will review our work studying superfluidity in homogeneous 2D and 3D Fermi gases, in particular measurements of the dynamic structure factor of 2D [1,2] and 3D [3] superfluids. Using Bragg spectroscopy, we determine the critical velocity and the superfluid gap in the BEC-BCS crossover, allowing for detailed comparisons with and benchmarks for theory. Our measurements enable us to directly study the role of reduced dimensionality on strongly correlated superfluids [2].

In the outlook I will report on our ongoing investigation of spin-imbalanced 2D Fermi gases.

[1] L. Sobirey et al., Science 372, 844 (2021)

[2] L. Sobirey et al., PRL 129, 083601 (2022)

[3] H. Biss et al., PRL 128, 100401 (2022)

Publication: [1] L. Sobirey et al., Science 372, 844 (2021)<br>[2] L. Sobirey et al., PRL 129, 083601 (2022)<br>[3] H. Biss et al., PRL 128, 100401 (2022)

Presenters

  • Henning Moritz

    University of Hamburg, 22761 Hamburg, Germany, University of Hamburg

Authors

  • Henning Moritz

    University of Hamburg, 22761 Hamburg, Germany, University of Hamburg

  • Hauke Biss

    University of Hamburg

  • Lennart Sobirey

    University of Hamburg

  • Cesar R Cabrera

    University of Hamburg

  • René Henke

    University of Hamburg

  • Niclas Luick

    University of Hamburg, 22761 Hamburg, Germany, University of Hamburg

  • Markus Bohlen

    University of Hamburg

  • Thomas Lompe

    University of Hamburg