Temporal coherence, anomalous moments, and pairing correlations in the classical-field description of a degenerate Bose gas
T. M. Wright, P. B. Blakie, and R. J. Ballagh

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how temporal correlations in a classical-field model can characterize Bose-Einstein condensates, revealing phase diffusion effects and linking short-time averaging to symmetry breaking and anomalous averages.
Contribution
It introduces a method to analyze temporal coherence in classical-field models, connecting short-time averaging with condensate identification and symmetry-breaking concepts.
Findings
Temporal correlations reveal condensate presence via spectral features.
Short-time averaging aligns with Penrose-Onsager condensate definition.
The anomalous thermal density matches mean-field theory predictions.
Abstract
The coherence properties of degenerate Bose gases have usually been expressed in terms of spatial correlation functions, neglecting the rich information encoded in their temporal behavior. In this paper we show, using a Hamiltonian classical-field formalism, that temporal correlations can be used to characterize familiar properties of a finite-temperature degenerate Bose gas. The temporal coherence of a Bose-Einstein condensate is limited only by the slow diffusion of its phase, and thus the presence of a condensate is indicated by a sharp feature in the temporal power spectrum of the field. We show that the condensate mode can be obtained by averaging the field for a short time in an appropriate phase-rotating frame, and that for a wide range of temperatures, the condensate obtained in this approach agrees well with that defined by the Penrose-Onsager criterion based on one-body…
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