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arxiv: 1008.4864 · v1 · pith:WH64T5RFnew · submitted 2010-08-28 · ❄️ cond-mat.quant-gas

A synthetic electric force acting on neutral atoms

classification ❄️ cond-mat.quant-gas
keywords vectorpotentialelectricgaugesyntheticatomseffectivefield
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Electromagnetism is a simple example of a gauge theory where the underlying potentials -- the vector and scalar potentials -- are defined only up to a gauge choice. The vector potential generates magnetic fields through its spatial variation and electric fields through its time-dependence. We experimentally produce a synthetic gauge field that emerges only at low energy in a rubidium Bose-Einstein condensate: the neutral atoms behave as charged particles do in the presence of a homogeneous effective vector potential. We have generated a synthetic electric field through the time dependence of an effective vector potential, a physical consequence even though the vector potential is spatially uniform.

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