Vortex nucleation as a case study of symmetry breaking in quantum systems

Author:  ["D. Dagnino","N. Barberán","M. Lewenstein","J. Dalibard"]

Publication:  Nature Physics

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Tags:     Physics

Abstract

Mean-field methods are a very powerful tool for investigating weakly interacting many-body systems in many branches of physics. In particular, they describe with excellent accuracy trapped Bose–Einstein condensates. A generic, but difficult question concerns the relation between the symmetry properties of the true many-body state and its mean-field approximation. Here, we address this question by considering, theoretically, vortex nucleation in a rotating Bose–Einstein condensate. A slow sweep of the rotation frequency changes the state of the system from being at rest to the one containing one vortex. Within the mean-field framework, the jump in symmetry occurs through a turbulent phase around a certain critical frequency. The exact many-body ground state at the critical frequency exhibits strong correlations and entanglement. We believe that this constitutes a paradigm example of symmetry breaking in—or change of the order parameter of—quantum many-body systems in the course of adiabatic evolution. A potentially general mechanism for symmetry breaking in mesoscopic quantum systems is revealed in a theoretical study, which shows how, in a rotating Bose–Einstein condensate, the symmetry properties of the true many-body state are related to those of its mean-field approximation.

Cite this article

Dagnino, D., Barberán, N., Lewenstein, M. et al. Vortex nucleation as a case study of symmetry breaking in quantum systems. Nature Phys 5, 431–437 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys1277

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