Long-lived state of ultracold bosons in the flat band of an optical kagome lattice
ORAL
Abstract
The kagome lattice hosts a flat band resulting from extensive geometric frustration. For fermions, this makes the kagome antiferromagnet a candidate for studying the quantum spin liquid phase. But even for weakly-interacting scalar bosons, the many-body physics in a flat band is complex and not fully understood. In this regime, condensation is dictated by quantum geometry and an exotic state with three-boson order (a "trion superfluid") is expected at intermediate temperatures. Stable loading of ultracold atoms into the flat band of an optical kagome lattice is challenging, as it is not the ground band. We achieve this for the first time by melting an attractive Mott insulator at negative absolute temperature. The state thus prepared occupies predominantly the flat band with a lifetime of many thousands of tunnelling times. It presents non-trivial structure in momentum space, so we use a variety of time-of-flight techniques to characterise it. I will report on our latest results.
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Publication: Luca Donini et al, Melting a bosonic Mott insulator into the flat band of an optical kagome lattice, Manuscript in preparation.
Presenters
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Luca Donini
Univ of Cambridge
Authors
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Luca Donini
Univ of Cambridge
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Sompob Shanokprasith
Univ of Cambridge
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Daniel Braund
Univ of Cambridge
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Tobias Marozsak
Univ of Cambridge
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Liam Crane
Univ of Cambridge
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Marnix Barendregt
Univ of Cambridge, Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics
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Max Melchner von Dydiowa
Univ of Cambridge
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Daniel G Reed
Univ of Cambridge
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Tiffany Harte
Univ of Cambridge
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Mehedi Hasan
Univ of Cambridge
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Ulrich Schneider
Univ of Cambridge