Session K1: 1-d Gases

8:00 AM–10:24 AM, Thursday, May 18, 2006
Knoxville Convention Center - Lecture Hall

Chair: Ana Maria Rey, Institute for Theoretical Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics

Abstract: K1.00003 : Low-Dimensional Fermi Gases in Optical Lattices

9:12 AM–9:48 AM

Preview Abstract

Author:

  Michael K{\"o}hl
    (Institute of Quantum Electronics, ETH Z{\"u}rich, 8093 Z{\"u}rich, Switzerland)

Optical lattices are a powerful tool to create novel many-body quantum systems with ultracold atoms. In particular, they allow to study low-dimensional quantum gases. A strongly interacting one-dimensional Fermi gas which we create in an optical lattice represents a realization of a tunable Luttinger liquid. We have observed two-particle bound states of atoms confined in a one- dimensional matter waveguide. These bound states exist irrespective of the sign of the scattering length, contrary to the situation in free space. In a spin-polarized Fermi gas interacting via a p-wave Feshbach resonance the strong confinement allows us to restrict the asymptotic scattering states. When aligning the spins along (or perpendicular to) the axis of motion in a 1D gas, scattering into channels with the angular momentum projection of $|m|=1$ (or $m=0$) can be completely suppressed.