Ultradilute quantum liquid of dipolar atoms in a bilayer
G. Guijarro, G. E. Astrakharchik, and J. Boronat

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the formation of ultradilute quantum liquids using ultracold dipolar atoms in a bilayer setup, without needing additional stabilizing potentials, and explores their phase diagram through quantum Monte Carlo simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a new bilayer system where dipolar interactions alone stabilize ultradilute quantum liquids, expanding understanding of dipolar many-body physics.
Findings
Quantum Monte Carlo simulations reveal a rich phase diagram.
The liquid phase is stabilized by a balance of dimer-dimer attraction and three-dimer repulsion.
The equilibrium density of the liquid is highly controllable via interlayer distance.
Abstract
We show that ultradilute quantum liquids can be formed with ultracold bosonic dipolar atoms in a bilayer geometry. Contrary to previous realizations of ultradilute liquids, there is no need for stabilizing the system with an additional repulsive short-range potential. The advantage of the proposed system is that dipolar interactions on their own are sufficient for creation of a self-bound state and no additional short-range potential is needed for the stabilization. We perform quantum Monte Carlo simulations and find a rich ground-state phase diagram that contains quantum phase transitions between liquid, solid, atomic gas, and molecular gas phases. The stabilization mechanism of the liquid phase is consistent with the microscopic scenario in which the effective dimer-dimer attraction is balanced by an effective three-dimer repulsion. The equilibrium density of the liquid, which is…
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