When does a Fermi puddle become a Fermi sea? Emergence of pairing in two-dimensional trapped mesoscopic Fermi gases
Emma K. Laird, Brendan C. Mulkerin, Jia Wang, Matthew J. Davis
SciPost Phys. 17, 163 (2024) · published 11 December 2024
- doi: 10.21468/SciPostPhys.17.6.163
- Submissions/Reports
Abstract
Pairing lies at the heart of superfluidity in fermionic systems. Motivated by recent experiments in mesoscopic Fermi gases, we study up to six fermionic atoms with equal masses and equal populations in two different spin states, confined in a quasi-two-dimensional harmonic trap. We couple a stochastic variational approach with the use of an explicitly correlated Gaussian basis set, which enables us to obtain highly accurate energies and structural properties. Utilising two-dimensional two-body scattering theory with a finite-range Gaussian interaction potential, we tune the effective range to model realistic quasi-two-dimensional scattering. We calculate the excitation spectrum, pair correlation function, and number of pairs as a function of increasing attractive interaction strength. For up to six fermions in the ground state, we find that opposite spin and momentum pairing is maximised well below the Fermi surface in momentum space. By contrast, corresponding experiments on twelve fermions have found that pairing is maximal at the Fermi surface and strongly suppressed beneath [M. Holten et al., Nature 606, 287-291 (2022)]. This suggests that the Fermi sea — which acts to suppress pairing at low momenta via Pauli blocking — emerges in the transition from six to twelve particles.
Authors / Affiliations: mappings to Contributors and Organizations
See all Organizations.- 1 2 Emma Laird,
- 2 3 Brendan C. Mulkerin,
- 4 Jia Wang,
- 1 2 Matthew J. Davis
- 1 University of Queensland
- 2 ARC Centre of Excellence in Future Low-Energy Electronics Technologies [FLEET]
- 3 Monash University
- 4 Swinburne University of Technology