Publication | Open Access
Quantum versus classical statistical dynamics of an ultracold Bose gas
99
Citations
59
References
2007
Year
Quantum DynamicEngineeringMany-body Quantum PhysicStatistical Field TheoryQuantum ComputingUltracold Bose GasQuantum Mechanical PropertyUltracold AtomQuantum EntanglementQuantum ScienceStatistical MechanicsPhysicsQuantum Field TheoryAtomic PhysicsBose-einstein CondensationUltracold Bose GasesNatural SciencesCondensed Matter PhysicsApplied PhysicsQuantum FluctuationsQuantitative Interpretation
We investigate the conditions under which quantum fluctuations are relevant for the quantitative interpretation of experiments with ultracold Bose gases. This requires to go beyond the description in terms of the Gross-Pitaevskii and Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov mean-field theories, which can be obtained as classical (statistical) field-theory approximations of the quantum many-body problem. We employ functional-integral techniques based on the two-particle irreducible (2PI) effective action. The role of quantum fluctuations is studied within the nonperturbative 2PI $1∕\mathcal{N}$ expansion to next-to-leading order. At this accuracy level memory integrals enter the dynamic equations, which differ for quantum and classical statistical descriptions. This can be used to obtain a classicality condition for the many-body dynamics. We exemplify this condition by studying the nonequilibrium evolution of a one-dimensional Bose gas of sodium atoms, and discuss some distinctive properties of quantum versus classical statistical dynamics.
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