Superfluid-Crystal Quantum Phase Transitions with 2D molecular and atomic gases

Guido Pupillo

Universität Innsbruck, Institut für Quantenoptik und Quanteninformation, Technikerstr. 21a, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria

G. Pupillo, H.P. Buechler, A. Micheli, M. Lukin, E. Demler, N.V. Prokof'ev, P. Zoller

In this talk we address the strongly interacting regime of an ensemble of dipoles in two dimensions. We show the existence of a quantum phase transition from a superfluid to a triangular crystal, driven by the competition of interaction and kinetic energies. We analyze the phase diagram by means of analytic estimates and quantum Monte-Carlo simulations for the case of repulsive dipolar interactions. As a specific realization we consider polar molecules confined in a plane by a tight one-dimensional optical lattice. Applying an electric field allows to induce a finite dipole moment perpendicular to the plane, which yields the characteristic repulsive long-range dipolar shape of the interactions. However, the internal structure of the polar molecules also allows for tailoring the long-range part of the interactions by using a microwave field. We show that this enables one to engineer a wide variety of potentials which include e.g. hard-core repulsion, and potentials which are attractive at long distances, while strongly repulsive at short distances. Finally, we analyze the experimentally relevant case of a mesoscopic number of particles confined in an additional in-plane parabolic potential. We show that for the purely repulsive dipolar potential it is possible to realize lattice geometries which can differ significantly from the triangular one. The use of a microwave field can be used to modify the lattice spacing. We discuss the possibility to realize these systems utilizing Rydberg states of alkali atoms.

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