The Hall effect, which originates from the motion of charged particles in magnetic fields, has deep consequences for the description of materials, extending far beyond condensed matter. Understanding such an effect in interacting systems represents a fundamental challenge, even for small magnetic fields. In this work, we used an atomic quantum simulator in which we tracked the motion of ultracold fermions in two-leg ribbons threaded by artificial magnetic fields. Through controllable quench dynamics, we measured the Hall response for a range of synthetic tunneling and atomic interaction strengths. We unveil a universal interaction-independent behavior above an interaction threshold, in agreement with theoretical analyses. The ability to reach hard-to-compute regimes demonstrates the power of quantum simulation to describe strongly correlated topological states of matter.

Observation of universal Hall response in strongly interacting Fermions / Zhou, T-W; Cappellini, G; Tusi, D; Franchi, L; Parravicini, J; Repellin, C; Greschner, S; Inguscio, M; Giamarchi, T; Filippone, M; Catani, J; Fallani, L. - In: SCIENCE. - ISSN 0036-8075. - ELETTRONICO. - 381:(2023), pp. 427-430. [10.1126/science.add1969]

Observation of universal Hall response in strongly interacting Fermions

Cappellini, G;Tusi, D;Franchi, L;Parravicini, J;Inguscio, M;Catani, J;Fallani, L
2023

Abstract

The Hall effect, which originates from the motion of charged particles in magnetic fields, has deep consequences for the description of materials, extending far beyond condensed matter. Understanding such an effect in interacting systems represents a fundamental challenge, even for small magnetic fields. In this work, we used an atomic quantum simulator in which we tracked the motion of ultracold fermions in two-leg ribbons threaded by artificial magnetic fields. Through controllable quench dynamics, we measured the Hall response for a range of synthetic tunneling and atomic interaction strengths. We unveil a universal interaction-independent behavior above an interaction threshold, in agreement with theoretical analyses. The ability to reach hard-to-compute regimes demonstrates the power of quantum simulation to describe strongly correlated topological states of matter.
2023
381
427
430
Zhou, T-W; Cappellini, G; Tusi, D; Franchi, L; Parravicini, J; Repellin, C; Greschner, S; Inguscio, M; Giamarchi, T; Filippone, M; Catani, J; Fallani,...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/1321951
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