Results in Physics (Aug 2024)

Bohmian analysis of dark solutions in interfering Bose–Einstein condensates: The dynamical role of underlying velocity fields

  • Jalal Tounli,
  • Ángel S. Sanz

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 63
p. 107859

Abstract

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In the last decades, the experimental research on Bose–Einstein interferometry has received much attention due to promising technological implications. This has thus motivated the development of numerical simulations aimed at solving the time-dependent Gross–Pitaevskii equation and its reduced one-dimensional version to better understand the development of interference-type features and the subsequent soliton dynamics. In this work, Bohmian mechanics is considered as an additional tool to further explore and analyze the formation and evolution in real time of the soliton arrays that follow the merging of two condensates. An alternative explanation is thus provided in terms of an underlying dynamical velocity field, directly linked to the local phase variations undergone by the condensate along its evolution. Although the reduced one-dimensional model is considered here, it still captures the essence of the phenomenon, rendering a neat picture of the full evolution without diminishing the generality of the description. To better appreciate the subtleties of free versus bound dynamics, two cases are discussed. First, the soliton dynamics exhibited by a coherent superposition of two freely released condensates is studied, discussing the peculiarities of the underlying velocity field and the corresponding flux trajectories in terms of both the peak-to-peak distance between the two initial clouds and the addition of a phase difference between them. In the latter case, an interesting correspondence with the well-known Aharonov-Bohm effect is found. Then, the recurrence dynamics displayed by the more general case of two condensates released from the two opposite turning points of a harmonic trap is considered in terms of the distance between such turning points. In both cases, it is presumed that the initial superposition state is generated by splitting adiabatically a single condensate with the aid of an optical lattice, which is then turned off. Nonetheless, although the lattice does not play any active role in the simulations, the parameters defining the initial states are in compliance with it, which helps in the interpretation and understanding of the results observed.

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