One-Dimensional Transport of Ultracold Bosons
I. Lerner
School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK
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Advances in cooling and trapping of atoms have enabled unprecedented experimental control of many-body quantum systems. This led to the observation of numerous quantum phenomena, important for fundamental science, indispensable for high-precision simulations of condensed-matter systems and promising for technological applications. However, transport measurements in neutral quantum gases are still in their infancy in contrast to the central role they play in electronics. In these lectures, after reviewing nascent experiments on quantum fermionic transport, I will focus on our theoretical prediction and the possibility of experimental observations of qualitatively new phenomena in transport of ultracold bosons which do not have a direct counterpart in quantum electronic transport in condensed matter systems. The description of this transport is based on the Luttinger liquid theory. So in the first part of the lectures I will introduce main concepts of the Luttinger liquid based on the functional bosonisation approach.

DOI:10.12693/APhysPolA.135.1162
topics: cold atoms, bosonization, transport