Quantum Dynamics of Bose-einstein Condensate in 1D Optical Lattice


Book Description

The realization of Bose Einstein condensation in ultra-cold dilute atomic gases, represented by a macroscopic occupation of ground state and the non-vanishing order parameter, makes the study of quantum many-body physics and condensed matter physics much easier. Especially, the quantum dynamics of condensate in the optical lattice serves as a perfect test-bed to study the condensed matter physics such as Josephson tunneling, Bloch oscillations, Landau-Zener tunneling. The interplay of mean field interaction and coherent Josephson tunneling leads to rich phases described by the Bose-Hubbard model such as Superfluid-Insulator transition at zero temperature and Berezinskii-Kosterlitz thouless transition at finite temperature. Furthermore, due to the extremely narrow momentum distribution of Bose Einstein condensate, it can be used to make interferometer as sensitive phase detector. The creation of number squeezed state of BEC enables the realization of Heisenberg-limited interferometer which can bring the noise below shot-noise level. The coherence time of such squeezed state interferometer can be longer than that of the coherent state interferometers. The quasi-2D geometry in 1D optical lattice can be used to study superfluid to normal fluid transition when topological order is broken. The studies of Kosterlitz-Thouless with inter-well coupling can lead to the interpretation of High TC superconductivity. This work will discuss the quantum dynamics of the Bose-Einstein condensate in 1D optical lattice.




Localisation of Bose-Einstein Condensates in Optical Lattices


Book Description

The properties of Bose-Einstein condensates can be studied and controlled effectively when trapped in optical lattices formed by two counter-propagating laser beams. The dynamics of Bose-Einstein condensates in optical lattices are well-described by a continuous model using the Gross-Pitaevskii equation in a modulated potential or, in the case of deep potentials, a discrete model using the Discrete Nonlinear Schrodinger equation. Spatially localised modes, known as lattice solitons in the continuous model, or discrete breathers in the discrete model, can occur and are the focus of this thesis. Theoretical and computational studies of these localised modes are investigated in three different situations. Firstly, a model of a Bose-Einstein condensate in a ring optical lattice with atomic dissipations applied at a stationary or at a moving location on the ring is presented in the continuous model. The localised dissipation is shown to generate and stabilise both stationary and traveling lattice solitons. The solutions generated include spatially stationary quasiperiodic lattice solitons and a family of traveling lattice solitons with two intensity peaks per potential well with no counterpart in the discrete case. Collisions between traveling and stationary lattice solitons as well as between two traveling lattice solitons display a dependence on the lattice depth. Then, collisions with a potential barrier of either travelling lattice solitons or travelling discrete breathers are investigated along with their dependence on the height of the barrier. Regions of complete reection or of partial reflection where the incoming soliton/breather is split in two, are observed and understood interms of the soliton properties. Partial trapping of the atoms in the barrier is observed for positive barrier heights due to the negative effective mass of the solitons/breathers. Finally, two coupled discrete nonlinear Schrodinger equations can describe the interaction and collisions of breathers in two-species Bose-Einstein condensates in deep optical lattices. This is done for two cases of experimental relevance: a mixture of two ytterbium isotopes and a mixture of Rubidium (87Rb) and Potassium(41K) atoms. Depending on their initial separation, interaction between stationary breathers of different species can lead to the formation of symbiotic localised structures or transform one of the breathers from a stationary one into a travelling one. Collisions between travelling and stationary discrete breathers composed of different species are separated in four distinct regimes ranging from totally elastic when the interspecies interaction is highly attractive to mutual destruction when the interaction is suffciently large and repulsive.













Emergent Nonlinear Phenomena in Bose-Einstein Condensates


Book Description

This book, written by experts in the fields of atomic physics and nonlinear science, covers the important developments in a special aspect of Bose-Einstein condensation, namely nonlinear phenomena in condensates. Topics covered include bright, dark, gap and multidimensional solitons; vortices; vortex lattices; optical lattices; multicomponent condensates; mathematical methods/rigorous results; and the beyond-the-mean-field approach.




Bose-Einstein Condensation


Book Description

Bose-Einstein Condensation represents a new state of matter and is one of the cornerstones of quantum physics, resulting in the 2001 Nobel Prize. Providing a useful introduction to one of the most exciting field of physics today, this text will be of interest to a growing community of physicists, and is easily accessible to non-specialists alike.




Soliton Management in Periodic Systems


Book Description

During the past ten years, there has been intensive development in theoretical and experimental research of solitons in periodic media. This book provides a unique and informative account of the state-of-the-art in the field. The volume opens with a review of the existence of robust solitary pulses in systems built as a periodic concatenation of very different elements. Among the most famous examples of this type of systems are the dispersion management in fiber-optic telecommunication links, and (more recently) photonic crystals. A number of other systems belonging to the same broad class of spatially periodic strongly inhomogeneous media (such as the split-step and tandem models) have recently been identified in nonlinear optics, and transmission of solitary pulses in them was investigated in detail. Similar soliton dynamics occurs in temporal-domain counterparts of such systems, where they are subject to strong time-periodic modulation (for instance, the Feshbach-resonance management in Bose-Einstein condensates). Basis results obtained for all these systems are reviewed in the book. This timely work will serve as a useful resource for the soliton community.