Ultracold bosons in 2D quasicrystalline and Aubry-Andre systems
POSTER
Abstract
Ultracold atoms in optical lattices provide an ideal medium for studies of interacting lattice physics, thanks to their flexible, clean and widely tuneable nature. As such, applying this medium to the investigation of quasiperiodic systems, and the rich physics associated with them, presents a promising avenue to probing a range of physical phenomena, not least those related to localization. This poster presents an overview on our recent experiments studying such systems, in which we load ultracold bosons to both an eight-fold rotationally symmetric 2D optical quasicrystal, and a 2D Aubry-Andre lattice, observing signatures of superfluid, Bose glass, and Mott insulator phases and mapping out phase diagrams of both systems with variable interaction strength. We furthermore study the dynamics in the quasicrystal, looking into both sudden quenches between the superfluid and Bose glass regimes, as well as the transport properties of the system and discuss how the results relate to the underlying system and localization phenomena.
Publication: E. Gottlob and U. Schneider, Hubbard models for quasicrystalline potentials, Phys. Rev. B 107, 144202 as well as https://arxiv.org/abs/2303.00737 and 2 papers in progress, 2 papers planned.
Presenters
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Lee C Reeve
University of Cambridge, Univ of Cambridge
Authors
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Lee C Reeve
University of Cambridge, Univ of Cambridge
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Qijun Wu
University of Cambridge
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David Gröters
University of Cambridge
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Zhuoxian Ou
University of Cambridge
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Emmanuel Gottlob
University of Cambridge
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Bo Song
Peking University
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Ulrich Schneider
University of Cambridge