Excitations of Bose-Einstein condensates at finite temperatures

<p>Recent experimental observations of collective excitations of Bose condensed atomic vapours have stimulated interest in the microscopic description of the dynamics of a Bose-Einstein condensate confined in an external potential.</p> <p>We present a finite temperature field theo...

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Main Authors: Rusch, M, Rusch, Martin
Other Authors: Burnett, K
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2000
Subjects:
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author Rusch, M
Rusch, Martin
author2 Burnett, K
author_facet Burnett, K
Rusch, M
Rusch, Martin
author_sort Rusch, M
collection OXFORD
description <p>Recent experimental observations of collective excitations of Bose condensed atomic vapours have stimulated interest in the microscopic description of the dynamics of a Bose-Einstein condensate confined in an external potential.</p> <p>We present a finite temperature field theory for collective excitations of trapped Bose-Einstein condensates and use a finite-temperature linear response formalism, which goes beyond the simple mean-field approximation of the Gross-Pitaevskii equation. The effect of the non-condensed thermal atoms we include using perturbation theory in a quasiparticle basis. This presents a simple scheme to understand the interaction between condensate and non-condensed atoms and enables us to include the effect the condensate has on collision dynamics.</p> <p>At first we limit our treatment to the case of a spatially homogeneous Bose gas. We include the effect of pair and triplet anomalous averages and thus obtain a gapless theory for the excitations of a weakly interacting system, which we can link to well known results for Landau and Beliaev damping rates. A gapless theory for trapped systems with a static thermal component follows straightforwardly.</p> <p>We then investigate finite temperature excitations of a condensate in a spherically symmetric harmonic trap. We avoid approximations to the density of states and thus emphasise finite size aspects of the problem. We show that excitations couple strongly to a restricted number of modes, giving rise to resonance structure in their frequency spectra. Where possible we derive energy shifts and lifetimes of excitations. For one particular mode, the breathing mode, the effects of the discreteness of the system are sufficiently pronounced that the simple picture of an energy shift and width fails. Experiments in spherical traps have recently become feasible and should be able to test our detailed quantitative predictions.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:cb07f727-3d56-4b18-b32f-4971116bd7fd2022-03-27T07:11:52ZExcitations of Bose-Einstein condensates at finite temperaturesThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:cb07f727-3d56-4b18-b32f-4971116bd7fdBose-Einstein gasEnglishPolonsky Theses Digitisation Project2000Rusch, MRusch, MartinBurnett, KBurnett, K<p>Recent experimental observations of collective excitations of Bose condensed atomic vapours have stimulated interest in the microscopic description of the dynamics of a Bose-Einstein condensate confined in an external potential.</p> <p>We present a finite temperature field theory for collective excitations of trapped Bose-Einstein condensates and use a finite-temperature linear response formalism, which goes beyond the simple mean-field approximation of the Gross-Pitaevskii equation. The effect of the non-condensed thermal atoms we include using perturbation theory in a quasiparticle basis. This presents a simple scheme to understand the interaction between condensate and non-condensed atoms and enables us to include the effect the condensate has on collision dynamics.</p> <p>At first we limit our treatment to the case of a spatially homogeneous Bose gas. We include the effect of pair and triplet anomalous averages and thus obtain a gapless theory for the excitations of a weakly interacting system, which we can link to well known results for Landau and Beliaev damping rates. A gapless theory for trapped systems with a static thermal component follows straightforwardly.</p> <p>We then investigate finite temperature excitations of a condensate in a spherically symmetric harmonic trap. We avoid approximations to the density of states and thus emphasise finite size aspects of the problem. We show that excitations couple strongly to a restricted number of modes, giving rise to resonance structure in their frequency spectra. Where possible we derive energy shifts and lifetimes of excitations. For one particular mode, the breathing mode, the effects of the discreteness of the system are sufficiently pronounced that the simple picture of an energy shift and width fails. Experiments in spherical traps have recently become feasible and should be able to test our detailed quantitative predictions.</p>
spellingShingle Bose-Einstein gas
Rusch, M
Rusch, Martin
Excitations of Bose-Einstein condensates at finite temperatures
title Excitations of Bose-Einstein condensates at finite temperatures
title_full Excitations of Bose-Einstein condensates at finite temperatures
title_fullStr Excitations of Bose-Einstein condensates at finite temperatures
title_full_unstemmed Excitations of Bose-Einstein condensates at finite temperatures
title_short Excitations of Bose-Einstein condensates at finite temperatures
title_sort excitations of bose einstein condensates at finite temperatures
topic Bose-Einstein gas
work_keys_str_mv AT ruschm excitationsofboseeinsteincondensatesatfinitetemperatures
AT ruschmartin excitationsofboseeinsteincondensatesatfinitetemperatures