Quantum Hall states of atomic Bose gases: density profiles in single-layer and multi-layer geometries
N.R. Cooper (Cambridge University), F.J.M. van Lankvelt (Oxford, University), J.W. Reijnders, K. Schoutens (University of Amsterdam)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the density profiles of rapidly rotating atomic Bose gases in single-layer and multi-layer setups, revealing quantized density steps and phase transitions related to quantum Hall states and vortex lattice melting.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of quantum Hall states in atomic Bose gases, including the effects of inter-layer tunneling and experimental signatures after expansion.
Findings
Density profiles show quantized steps due to incompressible liquids.
Different phases emerge depending on inter-layer tunneling strength.
Characteristic density features serve as experimental signatures of quantum Hall states.
Abstract
We describe the density profiles of confined atomic Bose gases in the high-rotation limit, in single-layer and multi-layer geometries. We show that, in a local density approximation, the density in a single layer shows a landscape of quantized steps due to the formation of incompressible liquids, which are analogous to fractional quantum Hall liquids for a two-dimensional electron gas in a strong magnetic field. In a multi-layered set-up we find different phases, depending on the strength of the inter-layer tunneling t. We discuss the situation where a vortex lattice in the three-dimensional condensate (at large tunneling) undergoes quantum melting at a critical tunneling . For tunneling well below one expects weakly coupled or isolated layers, each exhibiting a landscape of quantum Hall liquids. After expansion, this gives a radial density distribution with…
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