Barrier induced modulational instability in a two-component repulsive Bose-Einstein condensate
ORAL
Abstract
Modulational instability is an important hydrodynamic phenomenon associated with self-focusing (i.e., attractive) interactions in fluids, emerging in a variety of fields including water waves, nonlinear optics, and atomic superfluids. Surprisingly, this instability can also arise in the case of purely repulsive interactions if a multicomponent system is employed. Here, we show how a two-component Bose-Einstein condensate which is completely described by repulsive interactions can have an emergent self-focusing interaction due to the immiscibility. We show how a localized barrier within a stationary superfluid can induce modulational instability which then spatially spreads out over time. Through a joint experimental and numerical study, we characterize how this phenomenon manifests for multicomponent mixtures, and discuss the reduction to an effective single component model with attractive interactions.
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Presenters
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Sean Mossman
University of San Diego
Authors
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Sean Mossman
University of San Diego
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Peter W Engels
Washington State University
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Symeon I Mystakidis
Harvard University, Missouri University of Science and Technology, ITAMP, Harvard University
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Garyfallia Katsimiga
Missouri University of Science and Technology
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Alejandro Romero-Ros
University of Hamburg
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Peter Schmelcher
University of Hamburg, Zentrum für Optische Quantentechnologien, University of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany
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Gino Biondini
University of Buffalo
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Panayotis Kevrekidis
University of Massachusetts Amherst