Time-Dependent Impurity in Ultracold Fermions: Orthogonality Catastrophe and Beyond

The recent experimental realization of strongly imbalanced mixtures of ultracold atoms opens new possibilities for studying impurity dynamics in a controlled setting. In this paper, we discuss how the techniques of atomic physics can be used to explore new regimes and manifestations of Anderson’s or...

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Main Authors: Michael Knap, Aditya Shashi, Yusuke Nishida, Adilet Imambekov, Dmitry A. Abanin, Eugene Demler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2012-12-01
Series:Physical Review X
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.2.041020
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spelling doaj-8aa7c1b2038143b1b69120b666f3cd4b2020-11-24T23:12:02ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review X2160-33082012-12-012404102010.1103/PhysRevX.2.041020Time-Dependent Impurity in Ultracold Fermions: Orthogonality Catastrophe and BeyondMichael KnapAditya ShashiYusuke NishidaAdilet ImambekovDmitry A. AbaninEugene DemlerThe recent experimental realization of strongly imbalanced mixtures of ultracold atoms opens new possibilities for studying impurity dynamics in a controlled setting. In this paper, we discuss how the techniques of atomic physics can be used to explore new regimes and manifestations of Anderson’s orthogonality catastrophe (OC), which could not be accessed in solid-state systems. Specifically, we consider a system of impurity atoms, localized by a strong optical-lattice potential, immersed in a sea of itinerant Fermi atoms. We point out that the Ramsey-interference-type experiments with the impurity atoms allow one to study the OC in the time domain, while radio-frequency (RF) spectroscopy probes the OC in the frequency domain. The OC in such systems is universal, not only in the long-time limit, but also for all times and is determined fully by the impurity-scattering length and the Fermi wave vector of the itinerant fermions. We calculate the universal Ramsey response and RF-absorption spectra. In addition to the standard power-law contributions, which correspond to the excitation of multiple particle-hole pairs near the Fermi surface, we identify a novel, important contribution to the OC that comes from exciting one extra particle from the bottom of the itinerant band. This contribution gives rise to a nonanalytic feature in the RF-absorption spectra, which shows a nontrivial dependence on the scattering length, and evolves into a true power-law singularity with the universal exponent 1/4 at the unitarity. We extend our discussion to spin-echo-type experiments, and show that they probe more complicated nonequilibirum dynamics of the Fermi gas in processes in which an impurity switches between states with different interaction strength several times; such processes play an important role in the Kondo problem, but remained out of reach in the solid-state systems. We show that, alternatively, the OC can be seen in the energy-counting statistics of the Fermi gas following a sudden quench of the impurity state. The energy distribution function, which can be measured in time-of-flight experiments, exhibits characteristic power-law singularities at low energies. Finally, systems in which the itinerant fermions have two or more hyperfine states provide an even richer playground for studying nonequilibrium impurity physics, allowing one to explore the nonequilibrium OC and even to simulate quantum transport through nanostructures. This provides a previously missing connection between cold atomic systems and mesoscopic quantum transport.http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.2.041020
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Knap
Aditya Shashi
Yusuke Nishida
Adilet Imambekov
Dmitry A. Abanin
Eugene Demler
spellingShingle Michael Knap
Aditya Shashi
Yusuke Nishida
Adilet Imambekov
Dmitry A. Abanin
Eugene Demler
Time-Dependent Impurity in Ultracold Fermions: Orthogonality Catastrophe and Beyond
Physical Review X
author_facet Michael Knap
Aditya Shashi
Yusuke Nishida
Adilet Imambekov
Dmitry A. Abanin
Eugene Demler
author_sort Michael Knap
title Time-Dependent Impurity in Ultracold Fermions: Orthogonality Catastrophe and Beyond
title_short Time-Dependent Impurity in Ultracold Fermions: Orthogonality Catastrophe and Beyond
title_full Time-Dependent Impurity in Ultracold Fermions: Orthogonality Catastrophe and Beyond
title_fullStr Time-Dependent Impurity in Ultracold Fermions: Orthogonality Catastrophe and Beyond
title_full_unstemmed Time-Dependent Impurity in Ultracold Fermions: Orthogonality Catastrophe and Beyond
title_sort time-dependent impurity in ultracold fermions: orthogonality catastrophe and beyond
publisher American Physical Society
series Physical Review X
issn 2160-3308
publishDate 2012-12-01
description The recent experimental realization of strongly imbalanced mixtures of ultracold atoms opens new possibilities for studying impurity dynamics in a controlled setting. In this paper, we discuss how the techniques of atomic physics can be used to explore new regimes and manifestations of Anderson’s orthogonality catastrophe (OC), which could not be accessed in solid-state systems. Specifically, we consider a system of impurity atoms, localized by a strong optical-lattice potential, immersed in a sea of itinerant Fermi atoms. We point out that the Ramsey-interference-type experiments with the impurity atoms allow one to study the OC in the time domain, while radio-frequency (RF) spectroscopy probes the OC in the frequency domain. The OC in such systems is universal, not only in the long-time limit, but also for all times and is determined fully by the impurity-scattering length and the Fermi wave vector of the itinerant fermions. We calculate the universal Ramsey response and RF-absorption spectra. In addition to the standard power-law contributions, which correspond to the excitation of multiple particle-hole pairs near the Fermi surface, we identify a novel, important contribution to the OC that comes from exciting one extra particle from the bottom of the itinerant band. This contribution gives rise to a nonanalytic feature in the RF-absorption spectra, which shows a nontrivial dependence on the scattering length, and evolves into a true power-law singularity with the universal exponent 1/4 at the unitarity. We extend our discussion to spin-echo-type experiments, and show that they probe more complicated nonequilibirum dynamics of the Fermi gas in processes in which an impurity switches between states with different interaction strength several times; such processes play an important role in the Kondo problem, but remained out of reach in the solid-state systems. We show that, alternatively, the OC can be seen in the energy-counting statistics of the Fermi gas following a sudden quench of the impurity state. The energy distribution function, which can be measured in time-of-flight experiments, exhibits characteristic power-law singularities at low energies. Finally, systems in which the itinerant fermions have two or more hyperfine states provide an even richer playground for studying nonequilibrium impurity physics, allowing one to explore the nonequilibrium OC and even to simulate quantum transport through nanostructures. This provides a previously missing connection between cold atomic systems and mesoscopic quantum transport.
url http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.2.041020
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