Superfluid transition of homogeneous and trapped two-dimensional Bose gases.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Laboratoire de Physique Théorique de la Matière Condensée, Unité Mixte de Recherche, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique 7600, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, 4 Place Jussieu, 75005 Paris, France.

Published: January 2007

Current experiments on atomic gases in highly anisotropic traps present the opportunity to study in detail the low temperature phases of two-dimensional inhomogeneous systems. Although, in an ideal gas, the trapping potential favors Bose-Einstein condensation at finite temperature, interactions tend to destabilize the condensate, leading to a superfluid Kosterlitz-Thouless-Berezinskii phase with a finite superfluid mass density but no long-range order, as in homogeneous fluids. The transition in homogeneous systems is conveniently described in terms of dissociation of topological defects (vortex-antivortex pairs). However, trapped two-dimensional gases are more directly approached by generalizing the microscopic theory of the homogeneous gas. In this paper, we first derive, via a diagrammatic expansion, the scaling structure near the phase transition in a homogeneous system, and then study the effects of a trapping potential in the local density approximation. We find that a weakly interacting trapped gas undergoes a Kosterlitz-Thouless-Berezinskii transition from the normal state at a temperature slightly below the Bose-Einstein transition temperature of the ideal gas. The characteristic finite superfluid mass density of a homogeneous system just below the transition becomes strongly suppressed in a trapped gas.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1785267PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0609957104DOI Listing

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