Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge, JJ Thomson Avenue, Cambridge CB3 0HE, UK.
Nature. 2012 May 23;485(7400):619-22. doi: 10.1038/nature11151.
The dynamics of a single impurity in an environment is a fundamental problem in many-body physics. In the solid state, a well known case is an impurity coupled to a bosonic bath (such as lattice vibrations); the impurity and its accompanying lattice distortion form a new entity, a polaron. This quasiparticle plays an important role in the spectral function of high-transition-temperature superconductors, as well as in colossal magnetoresistance in manganites. For impurities in a fermionic bath, studies have considered heavy or immobile impurities which exhibit Anderson's orthogonality catastrophe and the Kondo effect. More recently, mobile impurities have moved into the focus of research, and they have been found to form new quasiparticles known as Fermi polarons. The Fermi polaron problem constitutes the extreme, but conceptually simple, limit of two important quantum many-body problems: the crossover between a molecular Bose-Einstein condensate and a superfluid with BCS (Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer) pairing with spin-imbalance for attractive interactions, and Stoner's itinerant ferromagnetism for repulsive interactions. It has been proposed that such quantum phases (and other elusive exotic states) might become realizable in Fermi gases confined to two dimensions. Their stability and observability are intimately related to the theoretically debated properties of the Fermi polaron in a two-dimensional Fermi gas. Here we create and investigate Fermi polarons in a two-dimensional, spin-imbalanced Fermi gas, measuring their spectral function using momentum-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. For attractive interactions, we find evidence for a disputed pairing transition between polarons and tightly bound dimers, which provides insight into the elementary pairing mechanism of imbalanced, strongly coupled two-dimensional Fermi gases. Additionally, for repulsive interactions, we study novel quasiparticles--repulsive polarons--the lifetime of which determines the possibility of stabilizing repulsively interacting Fermi systems.
在多体物理中,环境中单杂质的动力学是一个基本问题。在固态中,一个众所周知的例子是杂质与玻色子浴(如晶格振动)耦合;杂质及其伴随的晶格畸变形成一个新的实体,即极化子。这个准粒子在高温超导材料的谱函数以及锰氧化物中的庞磁电阻中起着重要作用。对于费米子浴中的杂质,研究已经考虑了表现出安德森正交性灾难和近藤效应的重或不移动的杂质。最近,移动的杂质成为了研究的焦点,并且发现它们形成了新的准粒子,称为费米极化子。费米极化子问题构成了两个重要量子多体问题的极端但概念上简单的极限:分子玻色-爱因斯坦凝聚体与具有自旋不平衡的 BCS(Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer)配对的超流体之间的交叉,以及对于吸引相互作用的斯通纳巡游铁磁性。有人提出,在限制于二维的费米气体中可能会实现这些量子相(和其他难以捉摸的奇特状态)。它们的稳定性和可观测性与二维费米气体中费米极化子的理论上有争议的性质密切相关。在这里,我们在二维、自旋不平衡的费米气体中创建并研究费米极化子,使用动量分辨光发射谱测量它们的谱函数。对于吸引相互作用,我们发现了极化子和紧密束缚二聚体之间有争议的配对转变的证据,这为不平衡、强耦合二维费米气体的基本配对机制提供了深入的了解。此外,对于排斥相互作用,我们研究了新的准粒子——排斥极化子——其寿命决定了稳定排斥相互作用的费米系统的可能性。