Inferring rotations using a bosonic Josephson junction
Rhombik Roy, Ofir E. Alon

TL;DR
This paper presents a theoretical framework demonstrating how tunneling dynamics in a bosonic Josephson junction can be used to infer rotation frequency, displacement, and orientation, with potential applications in ultracold atomic systems.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to determine rotation parameters from tunneling dynamics in a rotating bosonic Josephson junction, combining mean-field and many-body analyses.
Findings
Rotation modifies tunneling time and momentum dynamics.
Asymmetric tunneling enables inference of rotation and displacement.
Orientation-dependent tunneling allows determining the double well's orientation.
Abstract
Rotation and quantum tunneling are fundamental concepts in physics, and their interplay in the ultracold atomic systems is of particular interest. In this theoretical work, we explore how tunneling dynamics in a bosonic Josephson junction are modified when the system is placed in a rotating, non-inertial frame. We show that the tunneling dynamics of ultracold bosons in a two-dimensional double-well potential offer an alternative pathway for inferring the rotation frequency. Using the mean-field and many-body analyses, we demonstrate that rotation strongly modifies the tunneling time period as well as the momentum and angular momentum dynamics. When the rotation axis passes through the center of the double well, the observables show distinct dynamical responses with increasing rotation frequency, enabling the rotation frequency to be assessed from changes in the tunneling dynamics. When…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum chaos and dynamical systems · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
