Demonstration of single-molecule resolution imaging, multi-state detection, and spatial addressing for ultracold RbCs molecules via lattice pinning and atomic fluorescence.
Observing Spatial Charge and Spin Correlations in a Strongly-Interacting Fermi Gas
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abstract
In this work, we explore two-dimensional attractive Fermi gases at the microscopic level by probing spatial charge and spin correlations in situ. Using atom-resolved continuum quantum gas microscopy, we directly observe fermion pairing and study the evolution of two- and three-point correlation functions as inter-spin attraction is increased. The precision of our measurement allows us to reveal nonlocal anticorrelations in the pair correlation function, fundamentally forbidden by the mean-field result based on Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) theory but whose existence we confirm in exact auxiliary-field quantum Monte Carlo calculations. We demonstrate that the BCS prediction is critically deficient not only in the superfluid crossover regime but also deep in the weakly attractive side. Guided by our measurements, we find a remarkable relation between two- and three-point correlations that establishes the dominant role of pair-correlations. Finally, leveraging local single-pair losses, we independently characterize the short-range behavior of pair correlations, via the measurement of Tan's Contact, and find excellent agreement with numerical predictions. Our measurements provide an unprecedented microscopic view into two-dimensional Fermi gases and constitute a paradigm shift for future studies of strongly-correlated fermionic matter in the continuum.
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cond-mat.quant-gas 1years
2025 1verdicts
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Multi-state detection and spatial addressing in a microscope for ultracold molecules
Demonstration of single-molecule resolution imaging, multi-state detection, and spatial addressing for ultracold RbCs molecules via lattice pinning and atomic fluorescence.