Comparative Study of BCS-BEC Crossover Theories above $T_c$: the Nature of the Pseudogap in Ultra-Cold Atomic Fermi Gases
Chih-Chun Chien, Hao Guo, Yan He, and K. Levin

TL;DR
This paper compares two theories of the pseudogap in ultra-cold atomic Fermi gases above the critical temperature, highlighting their differences in spectral functions and applicability regimes, with implications for experimental distinctions.
Contribution
It provides a detailed numerical comparison of NSR and BCS-Leggett theories, clarifying their different pseudogap characteristics and suitable temperature regimes.
Findings
BCS-Leggett pseudogap follows a BCS-like dispersion
NSR theory exhibits larger damping and different dispersion
Future momentum-resolved experiments could distinguish the theories
Abstract
This paper presents a comparison of two finite-temperature BCS-Bose Einstein condensation (BEC) crossover theories above the transition temperature: Nozieres Schmitt-Rink (NSR) theory and finite -extended BCS-Leggett theory. The comparison is cast in the form of numerical studies of the behavior of the fermionic spectral function both theoretically and as constrained by (primarily) radio frequency (RF) experiments. Both theories include pair fluctuations and exhibit pseudogap effects, although the nature of this pseudogap is very different. The pseudogap in finite -extended BCS-Leggett theory is found to follow a BCS-like dispersion which, in turn, is associated with a broadened BCS-like self energy, rather more similar to what is observed in high temperature superconductors (albeit, for a d-wave case). The fermionic quasi-particle dispersion is different in NSR theory and the…
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