Gaussian Potentials Facilitate Access to Quantum Hall States in Rotating Bose Gases
- 12 December 2007
- journal article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review Letters
- Vol. 99 (24), 240401
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevlett.99.240401
Abstract
Through exact numerical diagonalization for small numbers of atoms, we show that it is possible to access quantum Hall states in harmonically confined Bose gases at rotation frequencies well below the centrifugal limit by applying a repulsive Gaussian potential at the trap center. The main idea is to reduce or eliminate the effective trapping frequency in regions where the particle density is appreciable. The critical rotation frequency required to obtain the bosonic Laughlin state can be fixed at an experimentally accessible value by choosing an applied Gaussian whose amplitude increases linearly with the number of atoms while its width increases as the square root.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Composite fermion theory of rapidly rotating two-dimensional bosonsJournal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics, 2006
- Braid Topologies for Quantum ComputationPhysical Review Letters, 2005
- Non-Abelian Gauge Potentials for Ultracold Atoms with Degenerate Dark StatesPhysical Review Letters, 2005
- Fractional Quantum Hall States of Atoms in Optical LatticesPhysical Review Letters, 2005
- Artificial electromagnetism for neutral atoms: Escher staircase and Laughlin liquidsPhysical Review A, 2004
- Quantum Hall fractions for spinless bosonsPhysical Review B, 2004
- Quantum Hall Fractions in Rotating Bose-Einstein CondensatesPhysical Review Letters, 2003
- Creation of effective magnetic fields in optical lattices: the Hofstadter butterfly for cold neutral atomsNew Journal of Physics, 2003
- Composite fermion description of rotating Bose-Einstein condensatesPhysical Review B, 1999
- New Method for High-Accuracy Determination of the Fine-Structure Constant Based on Quantized Hall ResistancePhysical Review Letters, 1980