Exploration of doped quantum magnets with ultracold atoms
Annabelle Bohrdt, Lukas Homeier, Christian Reinmoser, Eugene Demler,, Fabian Grusdt

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in cold atom quantum simulations of doped quantum magnets and proposes a new mixed-dimensional bilayer system to facilitate high-temperature hole pairing.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of cold atom realizations of the Fermi-Hubbard model and introduces a novel bilayer system with a strong pairing mechanism for future exploration.
Findings
Demonstrated spin-charge separation in 1D systems
Observed extended-range antiferromagnetism in 2D systems
Proposed a new bilayer system with a strong hole pairing mechanism
Abstract
In the last decade, quantum simulators, and in particular cold atoms in optical lattices, have emerged as a valuable tool to study strongly correlated quantum matter. These experiments are now reaching regimes that are numerically difficult or impossible to access. In particular they have started to fulfill a promise which has contributed significantly to defining and shaping the field of cold atom quantum simulations, namely the exploration of doped and frustrated quantum magnets and the search for the origins of high-temperature superconductivity in the fermionic Hubbard model. Despite many future challenges lying ahead, such as the need to further lower the experimentally accessible temperatures, remarkable studies have already emerged. Among them, spin-charge separation in one-dimensional systems has been demonstrated, extended-range antiferromagnetism in two-dimensional systems has…
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