
Energetic atoms from “quasi-bound” p-wave Feshbach molecules
flying apart after an increase in the magnetic field caused
them to tunnel through an energy barrier. Two different types
of rotating p-wave atom pairs are imaged as they fly away from
the (red) ultracold atom cloud.
Credit: Jin Group
Graduate students John Gaebler and Jayson Stewart and Fellows John Bohn and Debbie Jin recently took an important step towards creating p-wave-paired superfluids with the creation of p-wave pairs of fermionic potassium (40K) atoms. The researchers used a p-wave Feshbach resonance to convert the ultracold atoms into p-wave K2 molecules. The p-wave molecules were intrinsically different from the s-wave molecules used in the crossover studies: The rotation of the p-wave atom pairs created a (centrifugal) energy barrier that would normally prevent molecule formation at ultralow temperatures. However, the researchers were able to use the p-wave Feshbach resonance to encourage atoms to tunnel through the barrier and form “quasi-bound” p-wave molecules.
Once the 40K atoms formed molecules inside the energy barrier, Gaebler and his colleagues discovered they could change the magnetic field and alter the molecules’ characteristics. When they decreased the field, a quasi-bound molecule would become a real molecule (a.k.a. a true bound state). Molecules created this way last only a few milliseconds before they disappear (most likely decaying into lower energy states undetectable in the experiment). When the researchers increased the magnetic field, molecules would become quasi-bound molecules behind the energy barrier. These quasi-bound molecules were very short lived because they rapidly tunneled out of the barrier. As they tunneled through the barrier, they converted their binding energy into energy of motion and rapidly flew apart from the original atom cloud, as shown here for two different types of p-wave pairs. The researchers studied the energetic atoms to learn more about the unusual molecules that gave rise to them.
Gaebler says the short lifetime of the p-wave molecules poses a significant challenge to producing fermionic p-wave condensates. However, he and his colleagues continue to investigate the formation of p-wave molecules and their behavior as quasi-bound molecules. They’re currently looking for clues of how to make a condensate and study other interesting many-body effects of p-wave atom pairs. —Julie Phillips
Reference:
J. P. Gaebler, J. T. Stewart, J. L. Bohn, and D. S. Jin, Physical Review Letters 98, 200403 (2007).