Litcius/Paper detail

Topological superfluid transition in bubble-trapped condensates

Andrea Tononi, Axel Pelster, Luca Salasnich

2022Physical Review Research48 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Ultracold quantum gases are highly controllable and thus capable of simulating difficult quantum many-body problems ranging from condensed matter physics to astrophysics. Although experimental realizations have so far been restricted to flat geometries, recently also curved quantum systems, with the prospect of exploring tunable geometries, have been produced in microgravity facilities as ground-based experiments are technically limited. Here, we analyze bubble-trapped condensates, in which the atoms are confined on the surface of a thin spherically symmetric shell by means of external magnetic fields. A thermally induced proliferation of vorticity yields a vanishing of superfluidity. We describe the occurrence of this topological transition by conceptually extending the theory of Berezinskii, Kosterlitz, and Thouless for infinite uniform systems to such finite-size systems. Unexpectedly, we find universal scaling relations for the mean critical temperature and the finite width of the superfluid transition. Furthermore, we elucidate how they could be experimentally observed in finite-temperature hydrodynamic excitations.

Topics & Concepts

SuperfluidityPhysicsScalingQuantumTopological defectBubbleVorticityCondensed matter physicsVortexQuantum fluidTopology (electrical circuits)Quantum mechanicsMechanicsGeometryMathematicsCombinatoricsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein CondensatesQuantum, superfluid, helium dynamicsAtomic and Subatomic Physics Research