Theory of spin-2 Bose-Einstein condensates: Spin correlations, magnetic response, and excitation spectra

Masahito Ueda and Masato Koashi
Phys. Rev. A 65, 063602 – Published 29 May 2002
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Abstract

The ground states of Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs) of spin-2 bosons are classified into three distinct phases (ferromagnetic, “antiferromagnetic,” and cyclic) depending on the s-wave scattering lengths of binary collisions for total-spin 0, 2, and 4 channels. Many-body spin correlations and magnetic response of the condensate in each of these phases are studied in a mesoscopic regime, while low-lying excitation spectra are investigated in the thermodynamic regime. In the mesoscopic regime, where the system is so tightly confined that the spatial degrees of freedom are frozen, the exact, many-body ground state for each phase is found to be expressed in terms of the creation operators of pair or trio bosons having spin correlations. These pairwise and trio-wise units are shown to bring about some unique features of spin-2 BECs such as a huge jump in magnetization from minimum to maximum possible values and the robustness of the minimum-magnetization state against an applied magnetic field. In the thermodynamic regime, where the system is spatially uniform, low-lying excitation spectra in the presence of magnetic field are obtained analytically using the Bogoliubov approximation. In the ferromagnetic phase, the excitation spectrum consists of one Goldstone mode and four single-particle modes. In the antiferromagnetic phase, where spin-singlet “pairs” undergo Bose-Einstein condensation, the spectrum consists of two Goldstone modes and three massive ones, all of which become massless when magnetic field vanishes. In the cyclic phase, where boson “trios” condense into a spin-singlet state, the spectrum is characterized by two Goldstone modes, one single-particle mode having a magnetic-field-independent energy gap, and a gapless single-particle mode that becomes massless in the absence of magnetic field.

  • Received 3 March 2002

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.65.063602

©2002 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Masahito Ueda1 and Masato Koashi2

  • 1Department of Physics, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8551, Japan
  • 2CREST Research Team for Interacting Carrier Electronics, School of Advanced Sciences, The Graduate University for Advanced Studies (SOKEN), Hayama, Kanagawa 240-0193, Japan

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Vol. 65, Iss. 6 — June 2002

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