Controllable interatomic interaction mediated by diffractive coupling in a cavity
Ivor Kre\v{s}i\'c

TL;DR
This paper proposes a method to control interatomic interactions in ultracold atoms using diffractive coupling in a cavity, enabling the engineering of complex many-body states like supersolids and droplet arrays for quantum simulation.
Contribution
It introduces a novel cavity-based approach to tailor photon-mediated interactions via diffractive coupling, expanding the toolkit for quantum simulation of many-body physics.
Findings
Demonstrates supersolid properties in self-organized BEC states.
Identifies Goldstone and Higgs modes in collective excitations.
Shows how intracavity light filtering can engineer interaction profiles.
Abstract
Photon-mediated interaction can be used for simulating complex many-body phenomena with ultracold atoms coupled to electromagnetic modes of an optical resonator. We theoretically study a method of producing controllable interatomic interaction mediated by forward-diffracted photons circulating inside a ring cavity. One example of such a system is the three-mode cavity, where an on-axis mode can coexist with two diffracted sidebands. We demonstrate how the self-organized stripe states of a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) occurring in this cavity geometry can exhibit supersolid properties, due to spontaneous breaking of the Hamiltonian's continuous translational symmetry. A numerical study of the collective excitation spectrum of these states demonstrates the existence of massles and finite-gap excitations, which are identified as phase (Goldstone) and amplitude (Higgs) atomic density…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanical and Optical Resonators · Photonic and Optical Devices · Photonic Crystals and Applications
