Theory of ultracold Fermi gases
Stefano Giorgini, Lev P. Pitaevskii, Sandro Stringari

TL;DR
This paper reviews the theoretical understanding of ultracold Fermi gases, focusing on interaction effects, superfluidity, and various regimes like BCS, BEC, and unitarity, comparing predictions with experiments.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive theoretical overview of ultracold Fermi gases, including new insights into superfluid phases and the BCS-BEC crossover, with comparisons to experimental data.
Findings
Superfluid transition occurs at high temperatures near the Fermi temperature.
The BCS-BEC crossover is well described by mean-field and non-perturbative methods.
Experimental results generally agree with theoretical predictions.
Abstract
The physics of quantum degenerate Fermi gases in uniform as well as in harmonically trapped configurations is reviewed from a theoretical perspective. Emphasis is given to the effect of interactions which play a crucial role, bringing the gas into a superfluid phase at low temperature. In these dilute systems interactions are characterized by a single parameter, the s-wave scattering length, whose value can be tuned using an external magnetic field near a Feshbach resonance. The BCS limit of ordinary Fermi superfluidity, the Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) of dimers and the unitary limit of large scattering length are important regimes exhibited by interacting Fermi gases. In particular the BEC and the unitary regimes are characterized by a high value of the superfluid critical temperature, of the order of the Fermi temperature. Different physical properties are discussed, including…
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