APS March Meeting 2016
Volume 61, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 14–18, 2016;
Baltimore, Maryland
Session E13: Exploring Topological Physics with Cold Atoms
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
Room: 309
Sponsoring
Unit:
DAMOP
Abstract ID: BAPS.2016.MAR.E13.3
Abstract: E13.00003 : Measuring Chern numbers in Atomic Gases: 2D and 4D Quantum Hall Physics in the Lab
9:12 AM–9:48 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Nathan Goldman
(Universit\'e Libre de Bruxelles (ULB))
Optical-lattice experiments have recently succeeded in probing the geometry of 2D Bloch bands with cold neutral atoms. Beyond these local geometrical effects, which are captured by the Berry curvature, 2D Bloch bands may also display non-trivial topology, a global property captured by a topological invariant (e.g. the first Chern number). Such topological properties have dramatic consequences on the transport of non-interacting atoms, such as quantized responses whenever the bands are uniformly populated. In this talk, I will start with the first experimental demonstration of topological transport in a gas of neutral particles, which revealed the Chern number through a cold-atom analogue of quantum-Hall measurements\footnote{\emph{Measuring the Chern Number of Hofstadter Bands with Ultracold Bosonic Atoms},\\
M. Aidelsburger, M. Lohse, C. Schweizer, M. Atala, J. T. Barreiro,
S. Nascimbene, N. R. Cooper, I. Bloch and N. Goldman,\\
Nature Physics {\bf 11}, 162 (2015).}. I will then describe how this Chern-number measurement could be extended in order to probe the topology of higher-dimensional systems. In particular, I will show how the \emph{second Chern number} -- an emblematic topological invariant associated with 4D Bloch bands -- could be extracted from an atomic gas, using a 3D optical lattice extended by a synthetic dimension\footnote{\emph{Four-Dimensional Quantum Hall Effect with Ultracold Atoms},\\
H. M. Price, O. Zilberberg, T. Ozawa, I. Carusotto and N. Goldman, \\
Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 115}, 195303 (2015).}. Finally, I will describe a general scheme by which optical lattices of subwavelength spacing could be realized\footnote{\emph{Dynamic Optical Lattices of Subwavelength Spacing for Ultracold Atoms},\\
S. Nascimbene, N. Goldman, N. R. Cooper and J. Dalibard,\\
Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 115}, 140401 (2015).}. This method leads to topological band structures with significantly enhanced energy scales, offering an interesting route towards the experimental realization of strongly-correlated topological states with cold atoms.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2016.MAR.E13.3