An experimental scheme creates a programmable dynamic 2D quasiperiodic optical lattice with phase noise suppressed by over 70 dB below 60 Hz and 350 kHz modulation bandwidth, enabling translational and phasonic control faster than recoil velocity.
On the origin of energy gaps in quasicrystalline potentials
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abstract
Quasicrystals, structures that are ordered yet aperiodic, defy conventional band theory, confining most studies to finite-size real-space numerics. We overcome this limitation with a configuration-space framework that predicts and explains the positions and origins of energy gaps in quasicrystalline potentials. We find that a hierarchy of gaps stems from resonant hybridization between increasingly distant neighboring sites, pinning the integrated density of states below these gaps to specific irrational areas in configuration space. Large-scale simulations of a lowest-band tight-binding model built from localized Wannier functions show excellent agreement with these predictions. By moving beyond finite-size numerics, this study advances the understanding of quasicrystalline potentials, paving the way for new explorations of their quantum properties in the infinite-size limit.
fields
cond-mat.quant-gas 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Programmable Dynamic Phase Control of a Quasiperiodic Optical Lattice
An experimental scheme creates a programmable dynamic 2D quasiperiodic optical lattice with phase noise suppressed by over 70 dB below 60 Hz and 350 kHz modulation bandwidth, enabling translational and phasonic control faster than recoil velocity.