Fractional quantum Hall physics and higher-order momentum correlations in a few spinful fermionic contact-interacting ultracold atoms in rotating traps
Constantine Yannouleas, Uzi Landman

TL;DR
This paper explores the fractional quantum Hall effect in a few ultracold spinful fermionic atoms within rotating traps, revealing ordered quantum structures and correlations that resemble rotating Wigner molecules, with implications for experimental measurements.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of higher-order momentum correlations in few-body spinful fermionic systems, extending the understanding of quantum Hall states and Wigner molecule formations.
Findings
Inherent ordered quantum structures in few-body states similar to rotating Wigner molecules.
Formation of symmetry-broken states with polygonal-ring structures under stirring.
Wavefunction analysis supports a spinful rotating Wigner molecule description.
Abstract
The fractional quantum Hall effect (FQHE) is theoretically investigated, with numerical and algebraic approaches, in assemblies of a few spinful ultracold neutral fermionic atoms, interacting via repulsive contact potentials and confined in a single rapidly rotating two-dimensional harmonic trap. Going beyond the commonly used second-order correlations in the real configuration space, the methodology in this paper will assist the analysis of experimental observations by providing benchmark results for -body spin-unresolved, as well as spin-resolved, momentum correlations measurable in time-of-flight experiments with individual particle detection. Our analysis shows that the few-body lowest-Landau-level (LLL) states with good magic angular momenta exhibit inherent ordered quantum structures in the -body correlations, similar to those associated with rotating Wigner molecules (WMs),…
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