Non-standard Hubbard models in optical lattices: a review
Omjyoti Dutta, Mariusz Gajda, Philipp Hauke, Maciej Lewenstein,, Dirk-S\"oren L\"uhmann, Boris A. Malomed, Tomasz Sowi\'nski, and Jakub, Zakrzewski

TL;DR
This review explores non-standard Hubbard models in optical lattices, emphasizing additional terms, higher bands, and complex couplings, highlighting their significance in strongly correlated ultracold atomic systems.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of recent non-standard Hubbard models, including density-dependent terms, higher band effects, and orbital couplings, advancing the understanding of complex many-body phenomena.
Findings
Density-induced tunneling is significant for contact and dipolar interactions.
Higher Bloch band effects are crucial for strong interactions even in deep lattices.
Effective models incorporating higher orbitals and interactions better describe experimental observations.
Abstract
Originally, the Hubbard model has been derived for describing the behaviour of strongly-correlated electrons in solids. However, since over a decade now, variations of it are also routinely being implemented with ultracold atoms in optical lattices. We review some of the rich literature on this subject, with a focus on more recent non-standard forms of the Hubbard model. After an introduction to standard (fermionic and bosonic) Hubbard models, we discuss briefly common models for mixtures, as well as the so called extended Bose-Hubbard models, that include interactions between neighboring sites, next-neighboring sites, and so on. The main part of the review discusses the importance of additional terms appearing when refining the tight-binding approximation on the original physical Hamiltonian. Even when restricting the models to the lowest Bloch band is justified, the standard approach…
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