Thermal blurring of a coherent Fermi gas
Hadrien Kurkjian (LKB (Lhomond)), Yvan Castin (LKB (Lhomond)), Alice, Sinatra (LKB (Lhomond))

TL;DR
This paper investigates the finite coherence time of a paired fermion condensate at non-zero temperature, linking phase dynamics to energy fluctuations and proposing an experimental measurement method.
Contribution
It provides a microscopic theory connecting condensate phase evolution to energy fluctuations and predicts coherence times for ultracold Fermi gases.
Findings
Phase coherence decays Gaussianly with a characteristic time scaling as N^{1/2} or N.
The phase evolution is proportional to a constructed chemical potential operator.
Predicted coherence times are tens of milliseconds for ultracold Fermi gases.
Abstract
It is generally assumed that a condensate of paired fermions at equilibrium is characterized by a macroscopic wavefunction with a well-defined, immutable phase. In reality, all systems have a finite size and are prepared at non-zero temperature; the condensate has then a finite coherence time, even when the system is isolated in its evolution and the particle number is fixed. The loss of phase memory is due to interactions of the condensate with the excited modes that constitute a dephasing environment. This fundamental effect, crucial for applications using the condensate of pairs' macroscopic coherence, was scarcely studied. We link the coherence time to the condensate phase dynamics, and we show with a microscopic theory that the time derivative of the condensate phase operator is proportional to a chemical potential operator that we construct including both the…
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