Magnetism and Hund's Rule in an Optical Lattice with Cold Fermions
K. Karkkainen, M. Borgh, M. Manninen, S. M. Reimann

TL;DR
This paper explores how cold fermionic atoms in optical lattices exhibit diverse magnetic phases influenced by shell filling and Hund's rule, revealing a tunable quantum magnetism system with potential technological applications.
Contribution
It demonstrates the magnetic phase diagram of fermions in optical lattices, highlighting the role of shell structure and Hund's rule in determining magnetic order.
Findings
Shallow lattices are non-magnetic due to strong tunneling.
Deeper lattices show magnetic phases driven by shell filling.
Sequence of magnetic phases includes non-magnetic, ferromagnetic, and antiferromagnetic.
Abstract
Artificially confined, small quantum systems show a high potential for employing quantum physics in technology. Ultra-cold atom gases have opened an exciting laboratory in which to explore many-particle systems that are not accessible in conventional atomic or solid state physics. It appears promising that optical trapping of cold bosonic or fermionic atoms will make construction of devices with unprecedented precision possible in the future, thereby allowing experimenters to make their samples much more "clean", and hence more coherent. Trapped atomic quantum gases may thus provide an interesting alternative to the quantum dot nanostructures produced today. Optical lattices created by standing laser waves loaded with ultra-cold atoms are an example of this. They provide a unique experimental setup to study artificial crystal structures with tunable physical parameters. Here we…
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