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Thursday, March 07, 2019
12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
Lauritsen 469

IQIM Postdoctoral and Graduate Student Seminar

Probing the 2D Fermi-Hubbard Model Under a Quantum Gas Microscope
Matt Nichols, PhD student, Zwierlein Group, MIT,
Speaker's Bio:
Matt is a final year PhD student in Martin Zwierlein's group at MIT. He has co-pioneered quantum gas microscopy of Fermi Hubbard models. His most recent results on spin diffusion push the boundaries of quantum simulation in this area, and are to my knowledge, one of the few results at the edge or even outside of what can be simulated classically.

Lunch will be served at noon.

Ultracold fermionic atoms in optical lattices offer a pristine platform for quantum simulation of materials with strong electron correlations. With the advent of quantum gas microscopy, we now have the abilities to observe and manipulate these systems at the level of single atoms and lattice sites. In this talk, I will describe how we perform microscopy on fermionic 40K, and how we realize the two-dimensional Fermi-Hubbard model, a paradigm believed to capture the essence of high-Tc superconductivity in the cuprates. I will then discuss two experiments we performed using this system. In the first, we examined spatial spin and charge correlations in a fermionic Mott insulator. At half-filling, we observed antiferromagnetic spin correlations in the presence of doublon-hole bunching. Upon doping, these spin correlations weakened monotonically, and an interaction-enhanced Pauli hole emerged, a real-space manifestation of Pauli-blocking. In the second, we measured the spin conductivity of a homogeneous Mott insulator at half-filling, a quantity which is difficult to measure in the cuprates, and highly challenging to calculate theoretically. For strong interactions, we observed diffusive spin transport driven by super-exchange and doublon-hole assisted tunneling. Extending the technique developed for this measurement to finite doping could shed light on the complex interplay between spin and charge in the Hubbard model.

For more information, please contact Marcia Brown by phone at 626-395-4013 or by email at [email protected].