4.6 Article

Dynamics of Ultracold Bosons in Artificial Gauge Fields-Angular Momentum, Fragmentation, and the Variance of Entropy

Journal

ENTROPY
Volume 23, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/e23040392

Keywords

Boson systems; ultracold gases; trapped gases; dynamic properties of condensates; collective and hydrodynamic excitations; superfluid flow; Bose– Einstein condensates; vortices; topological excitations

Funding

  1. Austrian Science Foundation (FWF) [P-32033-N32]
  2. FWF [M-2653]
  3. WienerWissenschafts und Technologie Fonds (WWTF) [MA16-066]
  4. German Research Foundation (DFG) [INST 40/467-1 FUGG, INST 39/963-1 FUGG, INST 37/935-1 FUGG]
  5. state of Baden-Wurttemberg [INST 40/467-1 FUGG, INST 39/963-1 FUGG, INST 37/935-1 FUGG]

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The dynamics of two-dimensional interacting ultracold bosons in an artificial gauge field were studied, revealing the implantation of angular momentum and emergence of fragmentation in the system. The experimental assessment of fragmentation and angular momentum was demonstrated to be possible through statistical analysis of image entropy variance.
We consider the dynamics of two-dimensional interacting ultracold bosons triggered by suddenly switching on an artificial gauge field. The system is initialized in the ground state of a harmonic trapping potential. As a function of the strength of the applied artificial gauge field, we analyze the emergent dynamics by monitoring the angular momentum, the fragmentation as well as the entropy and variance of the entropy of absorption or single-shot images. We solve the underlying time-dependent many-boson Schrodinger equation using the multiconfigurational time-dependent Hartree method for indistinguishable particles (MCTDH-X). We find that the artificial gauge field implants angular momentum in the system. Fragmentation-multiple macroscopic eigenvalues of the reduced one-body density matrix-emerges in sync with the dynamics of angular momentum: the bosons in the many-body state develop non-trivial correlations. Fragmentation and angular momentum are experimentally difficult to assess; here, we demonstrate that they can be probed by statistically analyzing the variance of the image entropy of single-shot images that are the standard projective measurement of the state of ultracold atomic systems.

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