Quantum liquid droplets in a mixture of Bose-Einstein condensates

@article{Cabrera2017QuantumLD,
  title={Quantum liquid droplets in a mixture of Bose-Einstein condensates},
  author={C R Cabrera and L. Tanzi and J Sanz and B. Naylor and P Thomas and Pierrick Cheiney and Leticia Tarruell},
  journal={Science},
  year={2017},
  volume={359},
  pages={301 - 304}
}
Making dilute quantum droplets In recent years, quantum fluids have been studied largely in gaseous form, such as the Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs) of alkali atoms and related species. Quantum liquids, other than liquid helium, have been comparatively more difficult to come by. Cabrera et al. combined two BECs and manipulated the atomic interactions to create droplets of a quantum liquid (see the Perspective by Ferrier-Barbut and Pfau). Because the interactions were not directional, the… 

A new state of matter of quantum droplets

S ince the realization of Bose–Einstein condensation (BEC) [1–3] and degenerate Fermi gases [4], ultracold quantum gases have become important platforms to study quantum phenomena and novel states of

Quantum Droplets in Imbalanced Atomic Mixtures

Quantum droplets are a quantum analogue to classical fluid droplets in that they are self-bound and display liquid-like properties — such as incompressibility and surface tension — though their

Quantum droplets of bosonic mixtures in a one-dimensional optical lattice

We demonstrate the existence of quantum droplets in two-component one-dimensional Bose-Hubbard chains. The droplets exist for any strength of repulsive intra-species interactions provided they are

Quantum liquids get thin

The observation of quantum liquid droplets in an ultracold mixture of two quantum fluids arises from a weak attraction and repulsive many-body correlations in the mixtures.

Phonon Stability of Quantum Droplets in Dipolar Bose Gases

Stabilized by quantum fluctuations, dipolar Bose–Einstein condensates can form self-bound liquid-like droplets. However in the Bogoliubov theory, there are imaginary phonon energies in the

Quantum Bose-Bose droplets at a dimensional crossover

We study liquid quantum droplets in a mixture of two-component Bose-Einstein condensates under variable confinement introduced along one or two spatial dimensions. Although the atom-atom scattering

Self-Bound Quantum Droplets of Atomic Mixtures in Free Space.

This work observes self-bound droplets in free space, and characterize the conditions for their formation as well as their size and composition, which sets the stage for future studies on quantum droplets, from the measurement of their peculiar excitation spectrum to the exploration of their superfluid nature.

Droplet-superfluid compounds in binary bosonic mixtures

While quantum fluctuations in binary mixtures of bosonic atoms with short-range interactions can lead to the formation of a self-bound droplet, for equal intra-component interactions but an unequal

Weber number and the outcome of binary collisions between quantum droplets

A theoretical analysis of binary collisions of quantum droplets under feasible experimental conditions is reported. Droplets formed from degenerate dilute Bose gases made up from binary mixtures of
...

References

SHOWING 1-10 OF 47 REFERENCES

Self-bound droplets of a dilute magnetic quantum liquid

Three-dimensional self-bound quantum droplets of magnetic atoms of ultracold atoms are observed in a trap-free levitation field and it is found that this dilute magnetic quantum liquid requires a minimum, critical number of atoms, below which the liquid evaporates into an expanding gas as a result of the quantum pressure of the individual constituents.

Equation of state and self-bound droplet in Rabi-coupled Bose mixtures

The droplet phase is characterized and an energetic instability above a critical Rabi frequency provoking the evaporation of the droplet is discovered, and it is shown that the quantum pressure arising from Gaussian fluctuations can prevent the collapse of the mixture with the creation of a self-bound droplet.

Self-Bound Quantum Droplets of Atomic Mixtures in Free Space.

This work observes self-bound droplets in free space, and characterize the conditions for their formation as well as their size and composition, which sets the stage for future studies on quantum droplets, from the measurement of their peculiar excitation spectrum to the exploration of their superfluid nature.

Liquid quantum droplets of ultracold magnetic atoms

The simultaneous presence of two competing inter-particle interactions can lead to the emergence of new phenomena in a many-body system. Among others, such effects are expected in dipolar

Observation of Quantum Droplets in a Strongly Dipolar Bose Gas.

By systematic measurements on individual droplets it is demonstrated quantitatively that quantum fluctuations mechanically stabilize them against the mean-field collapse, and the interference of several droplets indicating that this stable many-body state is phase coherent.

Bright Soliton to Quantum Droplet Transition in a Mixture of Bose-Einstein Condensates.

It is shown theoretically that, depending on atom number and interaction strength, solitons and droplets can be smoothly connected or remain distinct states coexisting only in a bistable region.

Collective Excitations of Self-Bound Droplets of a Dipolar Quantum Fluid.

The filament-shaped droplets act as a quasi-one-dimensional waveguide along which low-angular-momentum phonons propagate and the crossover from a trap-bound condensate to a self-bound droplet is quantified.

Dynamics of collapsing and exploding Bose–Einstein condensates

The dynamics of how a Bose–Einstein condensate collapses and subsequently explodes when the balance of forces governing its size and shape is suddenly altered is explored.

Observing the Rosensweig instability of a quantum ferrofluid

This work uses in situ imaging to directly observe the spontaneous transition from an unstructured superfluid to an ordered arrangement of droplets in an atomic dysprosium Bose–Einstein condensate and shows spontaneous translational symmetry breaking.

Direct observation of growth and collapse of a Bose–Einstein condensate with attractive interactions

Direct observations of the growth and subsequent collapse of a 7Li condensate with attractive interactions are reported, using phase-contrast imaging and the success of the measurement lies in the ability to reduce the stochasticity in the dynamics by controlling the initial number ofcondensate atoms using a two-photon transition to a diatomic molecular state.