Towards Quantum Turbulence in Cold Atomic Fermionic Superfluids
Aurel Bulgac, Michael McNeil Forbes, Gabriel Wlaz{\l}owski

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential for quantum turbulence in cold atomic fermionic superfluids, highlighting their unique properties, experimental control, and relevance to both terrestrial and astrophysical phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces the use of a DFT-based theoretical framework and experimental techniques to study quantum turbulence in strongly interacting Fermi gases, a novel approach compared to traditional bosonic superfluids.
Findings
High vortex line density observed in unitary Fermi gases
Experimental control over topological defects demonstrated
Potential for studying exotic superfluid phenomena like LOFF supersolids
Abstract
Fermionic superfluids provide a new realization of quantum turbulence, accessible to both experiment and theory, yet relevant to phenomena from both cold atoms to nuclear astrophysics. In particular, the strongly interacting Fermi gas realized in cold-atom experiments is closely related to dilute neutron matter in neutron star crusts. Unlike the liquid superfluids 4He (bosons) and 3He (fermions) where quantum turbulence has been studied in the laboratory, superfluid Fermi gases stand apart for a number of reasons. They admit a reliable theoretical description based on a DFT called the TDSLDA that describes both static and dynamic phenomena. Cold atom experiments demonstrate exquisite control over particle number, spin polarization, density, temperature, and interaction strength. Topological defects such as domain walls and quantized vortices, which lie at the heart of quantum…
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