Cavity QED with Quantum Gases: New Paradigms in Many-Body Physics
Farokh Mivehvar, Francesco Piazza, Tobias Donner, Helmut, Ritsch

TL;DR
This review discusses recent advances in quantum-gas cavity QED, highlighting experimental and theoretical progress in controlling many-body phenomena, symmetry breaking, and topological phases using cavity-mediated interactions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the latest experimental and theoretical developments in quantum-gas cavity QED, emphasizing new many-body phases and control techniques.
Findings
Observation of spontaneous symmetry breaking and supersolidity
Implementation of tunable long-range atomic interactions
Realization of non-equilibrium topological phases
Abstract
We review the recent developments and the current status in the field of quantum-gas cavity QED. Since the first experimental demonstration of atomic self-ordering in a system composed of a Bose-Einstein condensate coupled to a quantized electromagnetic mode of a high- optical cavity, the field has rapidly evolved over the past decade. The composite quantum-gas--cavity systems offer the opportunity to implement, simulate, and experimentally test fundamental solid-state Hamiltonians, as well as to realize non-equilibrium many-body phenomena beyond conventional condensed-matter scenarios. This hinges on the unique possibility to design and control in open quantum environments photon-induced tunable-range interaction potentials for the atoms using tailored pump lasers and dynamic cavity fields. Notable examples range from Hubbard-like models with long-range interactions exhibiting a…
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