Cooling a band insulator with a metal: Fermionic superfluid in a dimerized holographic lattice

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Abstract

A cold atomic realization of a quantum correlated state of many fermions on a lattice, eg. superfluid, has eluded experimental realization due to the entropy problem. Here we propose a route to realize such a state using holographic lattice and confining potentials. The potentials are designedto produces abandinsulating state (low heat capacity) at the trap center, and a metallic state (high heat capacity) at the periphery. The metal "cools" the central band insulator by extracting out the excess entropy. The central band insulator can be turned into a superfluid by tuning an attractive interaction between the fermions. Crucially, the holographic lattice allows the emergent superfluid to have ahigh transition temperature-even twice that of the effective trap temperature. The scheme provides a promising route to a laboratory realization of a fermionic lattice superfluid, even while being adaptable to simulate other many body states.

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Haldar, A., & Shenoy, V. B. (2014). Cooling a band insulator with a metal: Fermionic superfluid in a dimerized holographic lattice. Scientific Reports, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep06655

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