Imbalanced Fermi Gases at Unitarity
K. B. Gubbels, H. T. C. Stoof

TL;DR
This review discusses the physics of strongly interacting imbalanced Fermi gases, highlighting experimental control, unusual superfluid phases, and theoretical methods used to understand their complex phase diagram.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of experimental and theoretical advances in understanding imbalanced Fermi gases at unitarity, including novel superfluid phases and modeling techniques.
Findings
Identification of phase separation and gapless superfluid phases
Application of diagrammatic and renormalization-group methods
Development of inhomogeneous Fermi gas models
Abstract
We consider imbalanced Fermi gases with strong attractive interactions, for which Cooper-pair formation plays an important role. The two-component mixtures consist either of identical fermionic atoms in two different hyperfine states, or of two different atomic species both occupying only a single hyperfine state. In both cases, the number of atoms for each component is allowed to be different, which leads to a spin imbalance, or spin polarization. Two different atomic species also lead to a mass imbalance. Imbalanced Fermi gases are relevant to condensed-matter physics, nuclear physics and astroparticle physics. They have been studied intensively in recent years, following their experimental realization in ultracold atomic Fermi gases. The experimental control in such a system allows for a systematic study of the equation of state and the phase diagram as a function of temperature,…
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