the imbalanced fermi gas at unitarity...the unitary fermi gas interacting system of two-component...

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The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity Olga Goulko In collaboration with Matthew Wingate Based on Phys.Rev.A 82, 053621 (2010) DAMTP, University of Cambridge Jefferson Lab Theory Seminar, 2 May 2011

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Page 1: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity

Olga Goulko

In collaboration with Matthew WingateBased on Phys.Rev.A 82, 053621 (2010)

DAMTP, University of Cambridge

Jefferson Lab Theory Seminar, 2 May 2011

Page 2: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Cold quantum gases

• High tunability• interaction strength• temperature• dimensionality• . . .

• Many analogues• atomic gases• neutron stars• quark-gluon plasma• . . .

Page 3: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

The unitary Fermi gas

Interacting system of two-component fermions:Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a

∞ −∞0

1a

BEC regimestrongly bound

(bosonic) moleculesof two fermions

UNITARITYstrongly

interactingfermions

BCS regimepairs of fermionsweakly bound in

momentum space

Page 4: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

What is interesting about unitarity?

• System is dilute (range of potential � interparticle distance)and strongly interacting (interparticle distance � scatteringlength) at the same time

• No length scales associated with interactions ⇒ universalbehaviour

• Only relevant parameters: temperature and density

• High-temperature superfluidity

neutron star Tc = 106K Tc = 10−5TF

high-Tc superconductor Tc = 102K Tc = 10−3TF

atomic Fermi gas Tc = 10−7K Tc = 10−1TF

• Experimental data available

Page 5: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Methods to study unitarity

Strong interactions ⇒ No small parameter for perturbation theory

No exact theory for Fermi gas at unitarity!

What to do?

• Approximate schemes (e.g. mean-field theory) involveuncontrolled approximations

• Numerical Methods=⇒ Good results for critical temperature and other quantities

Our project: Calculating the critical temperature of the imbalancedunitary Fermi gas with the Determinant Diagrammatic MonteCarlo (DDMC) algorithm [Burovski et al. cond-mat/0605350]

Page 6: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

The Fermi-Hubbard model

Simplest lattice model for two-particle scattering

• Non-relativistic fermions

• Contact interaction between spin up and spin down

• On-site attraction U < 0 tuned to describe unitarity

• Grand canonical ensemble

• Finite 3D simple cubic lattice, periodic boundary conditions

• Continuum limit can be taken by extrapolation to zero density

H =∑k,σ

(εk − µσ)c†kσckσ + U∑x

c†x↑cx↑c†x↓cx↓,

where εk = 1m

∑3j=1(1− cos kj) is the discrete FT of −∇

2

2m .

Page 7: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Finite temperature formalism

Grand canonical partition function in imaginary time interactionpicture: Z = Tre−βH :

Z = 1 + + +− − ± . . .

Sign problem!

The diagrams of each order can be written as the product of twomatrix determinants [Rubtsov et al. cond-mat/0411344]

Z =∑p,Sp

(−U)p detA↑(Sp) detA↓(Sp),

where Sp is the vertex configuration and the matrix entries are free(finite temperature) propagators

Page 8: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Order parameter of the phase transition

Anomalous correlations in the superfluid phase:

⇒ Introduce pair annihilation/creation operators P and P†:

P(x, τ) = cx↑(τ)cx↓(τ) and P†(x′, τ ′) = c†x′↑(τ′)c†x′↓(τ

′)

At the critical point the correlation function

G2(xτ ; x′τ ′) =⟨TτP(x, τ)P†(x′, τ ′)

⟩=

1

ZTrTτP(x, τ)P†(x′, τ ′)e−βH

is proportional to |x− x′|−(1+η) as |x− x′| → ∞(in 3 spatial dimensions, where η ≈ 0.038 for U(1) universalityclass)

Page 9: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Order parameter of the phase transition

⇒ the rescaled integrated correlation function

R(L,T ) = L1+ηG2(xτ ; x′τ ′)

becomes independent of lattice size at the critical point

Finite-size corrections:

R(L,T ) = (f0 + f1(T − Tc)L1/νξ + . . .)︸ ︷︷ ︸universal scaling function

(1 + cL−ω + . . .)︸ ︷︷ ︸finite-size scaling

• Critical exponents for the U(1) universality class:νξ ≈ 0.67 and ω ≈ 0.8

• Non-universal constants to be determined:Tc , f0, f1, c (to first order)

Page 10: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Order parameter of the phase transition

Crossing of R(L,T ) curves for 2 lattice sizes Li , Lj :

R(Li ,Tij) = R(Lj ,Tij)⇒ Tij − Tc = const. · g(Li , Lj)

with

g(Li , Lj) =(Lj/Li )

ω − 1

L1νξ

j

(1− (Li/Lj)

1νξ

)+ cL

1νξ

j

(1− (Li/Lj)

1νξ−ω)

︸ ︷︷ ︸neglect?

c can take values of O(1)⇒ perform non-linear fit to 4 parametersinstead

Page 11: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Order parameter of the phase transition

Example: fit of the rescaled integrated correlator R(L,T )

0.130.14

0.15T

10

12

14

16L

0.04

0.06

0.08

R

(data taken at 4 different temperatures and 4 different lattice sizes)

Page 12: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Diagrammatic Monte Carlo

Burovski et al. cond-mat/0605350:

• sampling via a Monte Carlo Markov chain process

• the configuration space is extended → worm vertices

• physical picture: at lowdensities multi-ladder diagramsdominate

• updates designed to favourprolonging existing vertexchains

Page 13: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

The worm updates

Updates of the regular 4-point vertices: adding/removing a4-point vertex (changes the diagram order)

• Diagonal version: add or remove a random vertex

• Alternative using worm: move the P(x, τ) vertex to anotherposition and insert a 4-point vertex at its old position.⇒ choose new coordinates of P very close to its initialcoordinates⇒ the removal update always attempts to remove the nearestneighbour of P

Page 14: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

AutocorrelationsThe original worm algorithm achieved high acceptance ratios, butat the cost of strongly autocorrelated results:

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

0 20000 40000 60000 80000 100000

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

0 20000 40000 60000 80000 100000

0

0.002

0.004

0.006

0.008

0.01

0.012

0.014

0 10000 20000 30000 40000 50000 60000 70000

Rela

tive E

rror

Block Size

0

0.002

0.004

0.006

0.008

0.01

0.012

0.014

0 10000 20000 30000 40000 50000 60000 70000

Rela

tive E

rror

Block Size

Worm updates Diagonal updates

Page 15: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Alternative updates

Alternative set of updates: both weak autocorrelations and highacceptance rates [Goulko and Wingate, arXiv:0910.3909].

• Choose a random 4-point vertex from the configuration (willact as a worm for this step).

• Addition: add another 4-point vertex on the same lattice siteand in some time interval around the worm.

• Removal: remove the nearest neighbour of the worm vertex

This setup still prolongs existing vertex chains, but autocorrelationsare reduced since the worm changes with every update.

Page 16: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Alternative updates

0

0.001

0.002

0.003

0.004

0.005

0.006

0.007

0.008

0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140

Rela

tive E

rror

Block Size

Comparison between diagonal setup (red circles) and alternativeworm setup (blue squares) at low filling factor

Page 17: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

The balanced Fermi gas

An interacting system with equal number of spin up and spin downfermions (µ↑ = µ↓)

Page 18: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

The imbalanced Fermi gas

Interactions are suppressed in presence of an imbalance (µ↑ 6= µ↓)

Page 19: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

The imbalanced Fermi gas

Thermal probability distribution:

ρ(Sp) =1

Z(−U)p detA↑(Sp) detA↓(Sp)

Sign problem: µ↑ 6= µ↓ ⇒ detA↑ detA↓ 6= | detA|2

Sign quenched method: write ρ(Sp) = |ρ(Sp)|sign(Sp) and use|ρ(Sp)| as the new probability distribution

〈X 〉ρ =

∑X (Sp)ρ(Sp)∑

ρ(Sp)=

∑X (Sp)|ρ(Sp)|sign(Sp)∑ |ρ(Sp)|sign(Sp)

=〈X sign〉|ρ|〈sign〉|ρ|

Problems if 〈sign〉 ≈ 0

But for the unitary Fermi gas 〈sign〉|ρ| ≈ 1 for a wide range of ∆µ

Page 20: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

The imbalanced Fermi gas

Schematic plot of the sign near the critical point:

0.00 0.05 0.10 0.15 0.20

¶F

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

<sign>

Page 21: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Results

Relationship between ∆µ/εF = |µ↑ − µ↓|/εF and δν/ν =|ν↑−ν↓|ν↑+ν↓

0

0.005

0.01

0.015

0.02

0.025

0.03

0.035

0 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2 0.25

∆ν/ν

∆µ/εF

Page 22: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Results: the critical temperature

The critical temperature using only balanced data:

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9

Tc/ε

F

ν1/3

Tc(ν = 0) = 0.173(6)εF

ν → 0 corresponds to the continuum limit

Page 23: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Surface fits for the imbalanced gas

Surface fit of a physical observable X as a function of filling factorν1/3 and imbalance h = ∆µ/εF :

• At fixed imbalance X is a linear function of ν1/3, with slopeα(X )(h).

• X (h) and α(X )(h) viewed as functions h can be Taylorexpanded.

• Due to symmetry in h all odd powers in the expansion of X (h)and α(X )(h) have to vanish.

Hence the fitted function takes the form

X (ν, h) = X (h) + α(X )(h)ν1/3

We will expand the functions X (h) and α(X )(h) to 2nd order in h.

Page 24: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Results: the critical temperature

Surface fit of the critical temperature versus ν1/3 and h:

0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6

Υ1�3

0.0

0.1

0.2

DΜ�¶F

0.05

0.10

0.15

Tc�¶F

Data is consistent with Tc(ν = 0) = 0.171(5)εF , independent of h.

Page 25: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Results: the critical temperature

Lower bounds for the deviation of Tc from the balanced limit:

0.00 0.05 0.10 0.15 0.20 0.25

DΜ�¶F

0.14

0.15

0.16

0.17

Tc�¶F

lower bound: Tc(h)− Tc(0) > −0.5εFh2,

with additional assumption: Tc(h)− Tc(0) > −0.04εFh2

Page 26: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Results: the critical temperature

Comparison with other numerical studies and experiment:

• Crossings• Burovski, Prokof’ev, Svistunov, Troyer (DDMC) 0.152(7)• Burovski, Kozik, Prokof’ev, Svistunov, Troyer 0.152(9)• Bulgac, Drut, Magierski 0.15(1)

• Full fit• Abe, Seki 0.189(12)• Goulko, Wingate (DDMC) 0.171(5)

• Experiment• Nascimbene, Navon, Jiang, Chevy, Salomon 0.157(15)• Horikoshi, Nakajima, Ueda, Mukaiyama 0.17(1)

Page 27: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Results: the chemical potential

The average chem. pot. projected onto the (ν1/3 − µ) plane:

0.2

0.25

0.3

0.35

0.4

0.45

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8

µ/ε

F

ν1/3

µ(ν = 0) = 0.429(7)εF

ν → 0 corresponds to the continuum limit

Page 28: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Results: the energy per particle

The energy per particle using only balanced data:

0.25

0.3

0.35

0.4

0.45

0.5

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9

E/E

FG

ν1/3

E(ν = 0) = 0.46(2)EFG

ν → 0 corresponds to the continuum limit; EFG = (3/5)NεF

Page 29: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Results: the energy per particleSurface fit of the energy per particle versus ν1/3 and h:

0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8

Υ1�3

0.00

0.050.10

0.150.20

DΜ�¶F

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

E�EFG

Page 30: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Results: the contact density

The contact can be interpreted as a measure for the local pairdensity [Braaten, arXiv:1008.2922].

Definition contact [Werner and Castin, arXiv:1001.0774]:

C = m2g0Eint,

where g0 is the physical coupling constant.

The contact density is C = C/V and has units ε2F .

This was the first numerical calculation of the contact density atfinite temperature [Goulko and Wingate, arXiv:1011.0312]

Page 31: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Results: the contact density

The contact density using only balanced data:

0.08

0.085

0.09

0.095

0.1

0.105

0.11

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9

C/ε

F2

ν1/3

C(ν = 0) = 0.1102(11)εF2

ν → 0 corresponds to the continuum limit

Page 32: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Results: the contact densitySurface fit of the contact density versus ν1/3 and h:

0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8

Υ1�3

0.0

0.1

0.2

DΜ�¶F

0.09

0.10

0.11

C�¶F2

Page 33: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Outlook: temperatures beyond Tc

Problem: fixing a physical isotherm for T 6= Tc

Setting the scale: set lattice spacing b to be independent oftemperature ⇒ b = b(µ)

⇒ ν(µ,T )

ν(µ,Tc)=

n(T )

n(Tc)

(b(µ,T )

b(µ,Tc)

)3

=n(T )

n(Tc)

If the fix the lattice temperature ratio T (µ)/Tc(µ) we will movealong an isotherm

Page 34: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Outlook: temperatures beyond Tc

Works for T/Tc ≤ 4 for sufficiently small µ:

0

2

4

6

8

10

0 2 4 6 8 10

ν(µ

,T)/ν(µ

,Tc)

T/Tc

µ=0.4µ=0.5µ=0.7

Page 35: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Outlook: temperatures beyond Tc

Preliminary results: temperature dependence of the chemicalpotential

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

0.3

0.35

0.4

0.45

0.5

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8

µ/ε

F

ν1/3

T/Tc=3

T/Tc=2

T/Tc=1.5

T/Tc=1

Page 36: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Outlook: temperatures beyond Tc

Preliminary results: temperature dependence of the contact

0.075

0.1

0.125

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8

C/ε

F

2

ν1/3

T/Tc=3

T/Tc=2

T/Tc=1.5

T/Tc=1

Page 37: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Conclusions

• Lattice Field Theory is a useful tool for studying stronglyinteracting systems in condensed matter physics

• The DDMC algorithm can be applied to study the phasetransition of the unitary Fermi gas

• Imbalanced case with the sign quenched method

• Results for Tc/εF , µ/εF , E/EFG and C/ε2F for equal andunequal number of fermions in the two spin components

• Temperatures beyond Tc accessible

Page 38: The Imbalanced Fermi Gas at Unitarity...The unitary Fermi gas Interacting system of two-component fermions: Low-energy interactions are characterised by the scattering length a 10

Thank you!