Ground-state properties of artificial bosonic atoms, Bose interaction blockade and the single-atom pipette
Eugene B. Kolomeisky, Joseph P. Straley, and Ryan M. Kalas

TL;DR
This paper studies the ground-state properties of artificial bosonic atoms created by ultracold particles, revealing how their binding and energy depend on dimensionality, interactions, and potential depth, with implications for single-atom manipulation.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework for understanding bosonic atoms with short-range interactions, highlighting novel effects like enhanced resonant binding and the potential for a single-atom pipette.
Findings
Binding ability increases with dimensionality.
Unusual resonant binding in three dimensions.
Ground-state energy exhibits a tunable minimum.
Abstract
We analyze the ground-state properties of an artificial atom made out of repulsive bosons attracted to a center for the case that all the interactions are short-ranged. Such bosonic atoms could be created by optically trapping ultracold particles of alkali vapors; we present the theory describing how their properties depend on experimentally adjustable strength of ``nuclear'' attraction and interparticle repulsion. The binding ability of the short-range potential increases with space dimensionality - only a limited number of particles can be bound in one dimension, while in two and three dimensions the number of bound bosons can be chosen at will. Particularly in three dimensions we find an unusual effect of enhanced resonant binding: for not very strong interparticle repulsion the equilibrium number of bosons bound to a nuclear potential having a sufficiently shallow single-particle…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
