45th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Volume 59, Number 8
Monday–Friday, June 2–6, 2014;
Madison, Wisconsin
Session T2: Invited Session: Transport in Degenerate Gases
8:00 AM–10:00 AM,
Friday, June 6, 2014
Room: Ballroom CD
Chair: Joseph Thywissen, University of Toronto
Abstract ID: BAPS.2014.DAMOP.T2.3
Abstract: T2.00003 : Transport in the quantum critical regime
9:00 AM–9:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Tilman Enss
(University of Heidelberg)
In this talk I will explain the relevance of the quantum critical
point for the phase diagram of the unitary Fermi gas, briefly review
theoretical approaches, and present results for the shear viscosity
and spin diffusion in strongly interacting Fermi gases.
The unitary Fermi gas describes strongly interacting fermions ranging
from ultracold atoms near a Feshbach resonance to dilute neutron
matter, which share a common universal phase diagram. The behavior at
finite temperature is governed by a quantum critical point (QCP) at
zero temperature and zero density, and observables can be expressed by
universal scaling functions of the distance from the critical point.
In the quantum critical regime above the QCP, thermal and quantum
fluctuations are equally important, and the absence of a small
parameter makes the computation of critical properties demanding.
I will mention two theoretical approaches to transport properties in
this regime: the large-N expansion in the number of fermion flavors
allows for a systematic and controlled expansion even at strong
coupling and elucidates the importance of medium effects on
scattering. Second, the Luttinger-Ward, or self-consistent T-matrix
approach goes beyond the quasiparticle picture and also explains universal
high-energy tails.
I will present results on the shear viscosity, or internal friction,
for mass transport and show that the strongly interacting Fermi gas is
an almost perfect quantum fluid. On the other hand, if particles of
different spin move in opposite directions, the dynamics are governed
by spin diffusion. One can distinguish longitudinal diffusion, when
atomic clouds of different spin collide, and transverse diffusion,
when the magnetization is wound up in a helix in a spin-echo
experiment. Medium scattering and spin rotation have a strong effect
on spin diffusion, and I will discuss how spin transport becomes very
slow at strong coupling in the quantum degenerate regime and reaches a
quantum limit of diffusion.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2014.DAMOP.T2.3