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Theory of ultracold atomic Fermi gases

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TLDR
In this article, the physics of quantum degenerate atomic Fermi gases in uniform as well as in harmonically trapped configurations is reviewed from a theoretical perspective, focusing on the effect of interactions that bring the gas into a superfluid phase at low temperature.
Abstract
The physics of quantum degenerate atomic Fermi gases in uniform as well as in harmonically trapped configurations is reviewed from a theoretical perspective. Emphasis is given to the effect of interactions that play a crucial role, bringing the gas into a superfluid phase at low temperature. In these dilute systems, interactions are characterized by a single parameter, the $s$-wave scattering length, whose value can be tuned using an external magnetic field near a broad Feshbach resonance. The BCS limit of ordinary Fermi superfluidity, the Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) of dimers, and the unitary limit of large scattering length are important regimes exhibited by interacting Fermi gases. In particular, the BEC and the unitary regimes are characterized by a high value of the superfluid critical temperature, on the order of the Fermi temperature. Different physical properties are discussed, including the density profiles and the energy of the ground-state configurations, the momentum distribution, the fraction of condensed pairs, collective oscillations and pair-breaking effects, the expansion of the gas, the main thermodynamic properties, the behavior in the presence of optical lattices, and the signatures of superfluidity, such as the existence of quantized vortices, the quenching of the moment of inertia, and the consequences of spin polarization. Various theoretical approaches are considered, ranging from the mean-field description of the BCS-BEC crossover to nonperturbative methods based on quantum Monte Carlo techniques. A major goal of the review is to compare theoretical predictions with available experimental results.

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Observation of fermi surface deformation in a dipolar quantum gas

TL;DR: The observation of a Fermani surface deformation in a degenerate dipolar Fermi gas of erbium atoms is reported, which is caused by the interplay between strong magnetic dipole-dipole interaction and the Pauli exclusion principle and provides a basis for future studies on anisotropic many-body phenomena in normal and superfluid phases.
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Review of pseudogaps in strongly interacting Fermi gases.

TL;DR: The current experimental and theoretical understanding of the normal state of strongly interacting Fermi gases is reviewed, with particular focus on the phenomonology which is traditionally associated with the pseudogap.
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The Tensor Networks Anthology: Simulation techniques for many-body quantum lattice systems

TL;DR: In this paper, a compendium of numerical simulation techniques based on tensor network methods, aiming to address problems of many-body quantum mechanics on a classical computer, is presented, along with a self-contained introduction and selected advanced concepts in tensor networks, including examples of their applications.
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Effects of symmetry breaking in finite quantum systems

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of symmetry breaking and symmetry transformations in finite quantum systems is presented, with an emphasis on the peculiarities of the symmetry breaking in finite mesoscopic systems.
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Dynamics of dark solitons in a trapped superfluid fermi gas.

TL;DR: The appearance and dynamics of solitons across the crossover are revealed, and it is shown that the period dramatically increases as the soliton becomes shallower on the BCS side of the resonance.
References
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Effects of Configuration Interaction on Intensities and Phase Shifts

TL;DR: In this paper, a theoretical analysis of the shape of the 2s2p^{1}P resonance of He observed in the inelastic scattering of electrons is presented. But the analysis is restricted to the case of one discrete level with two or more continua and of a set of discrete levels with one continuum.
Journal ArticleDOI

Observation of Bose-Einstein Condensation in a Dilute Atomic Vapor

TL;DR: A Bose-Einstein condensate was produced in a vapor of rubidium-87 atoms that was confined by magnetic fields and evaporatively cooled and exhibited a nonthermal, anisotropic velocity distribution expected of the minimum-energy quantum state of the magnetic trap in contrast to the isotropic, thermal velocity distribution observed in the broad uncondensed fraction.
Book

The Nuclear Many-body Problem

TL;DR: In this paper, the Hartree-Fock method pairing correlations and superfluid nuclei was used to restore broken symmetries in the generator coordinate method of the generator-coordinate method.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electron correlations in narrow energy bands

TL;DR: In this paper, the Hartree-Fock approximation of the correlation problem for the d-and f-bands was applied to a simple, approximate model for the interaction of electrons in narrow energy bands.
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