The effect of atom losses on the distribution of rapidities in the one-dimensional Bose gas

We theoretically investigate the effects of atom losses in the one-dimensional (1D) Bose gas with repulsive contact interactions, a famous quantum integrable system also known as the Lieb-Liniger gas. The generic case of K-body losses (K = 1,2,3,...) is considered. We assume that the loss rate is...

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Main Author: Isabelle Bouchoule, Benjamin Doyon, Jerome Dubail
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SciPost 2020-10-01
Series:SciPost Physics
Online Access:https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.9.4.044
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spelling doaj-8fc374cf0d3e4f2cbfbbc9e76bdef1722020-11-25T01:24:08ZengSciPostSciPost Physics2542-46532020-10-019404410.21468/SciPostPhys.9.4.044The effect of atom losses on the distribution of rapidities in the one-dimensional Bose gasIsabelle Bouchoule, Benjamin Doyon, Jerome DubailWe theoretically investigate the effects of atom losses in the one-dimensional (1D) Bose gas with repulsive contact interactions, a famous quantum integrable system also known as the Lieb-Liniger gas. The generic case of K-body losses (K = 1,2,3,...) is considered. We assume that the loss rate is much smaller than the rate of intrinsic relaxation of the system, so that at any time the state of the system is captured by its rapidity distribution (or, equivalently, by a Generalized Gibbs Ensemble). We give the equation governing the time evolution of the rapidity distribution and we propose a general numerical procedure to solve it. In the asymptotic regimes of vanishing repulsion -- where the gas behaves like an ideal Bose gas -- and hard-core repulsion -- where the gas is mapped to a non-interacting Fermi gas -- we derive analytic formulas. In the latter case, our analytic result shows that losses affect the rapidity distribution in a non-trivial way, the time derivative of the rapidity distribution being both non-linear and non-local in rapidity space.https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.9.4.044
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Isabelle Bouchoule, Benjamin Doyon, Jerome Dubail
spellingShingle Isabelle Bouchoule, Benjamin Doyon, Jerome Dubail
The effect of atom losses on the distribution of rapidities in the one-dimensional Bose gas
SciPost Physics
author_facet Isabelle Bouchoule, Benjamin Doyon, Jerome Dubail
author_sort Isabelle Bouchoule, Benjamin Doyon, Jerome Dubail
title The effect of atom losses on the distribution of rapidities in the one-dimensional Bose gas
title_short The effect of atom losses on the distribution of rapidities in the one-dimensional Bose gas
title_full The effect of atom losses on the distribution of rapidities in the one-dimensional Bose gas
title_fullStr The effect of atom losses on the distribution of rapidities in the one-dimensional Bose gas
title_full_unstemmed The effect of atom losses on the distribution of rapidities in the one-dimensional Bose gas
title_sort effect of atom losses on the distribution of rapidities in the one-dimensional bose gas
publisher SciPost
series SciPost Physics
issn 2542-4653
publishDate 2020-10-01
description We theoretically investigate the effects of atom losses in the one-dimensional (1D) Bose gas with repulsive contact interactions, a famous quantum integrable system also known as the Lieb-Liniger gas. The generic case of K-body losses (K = 1,2,3,...) is considered. We assume that the loss rate is much smaller than the rate of intrinsic relaxation of the system, so that at any time the state of the system is captured by its rapidity distribution (or, equivalently, by a Generalized Gibbs Ensemble). We give the equation governing the time evolution of the rapidity distribution and we propose a general numerical procedure to solve it. In the asymptotic regimes of vanishing repulsion -- where the gas behaves like an ideal Bose gas -- and hard-core repulsion -- where the gas is mapped to a non-interacting Fermi gas -- we derive analytic formulas. In the latter case, our analytic result shows that losses affect the rapidity distribution in a non-trivial way, the time derivative of the rapidity distribution being both non-linear and non-local in rapidity space.
url https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.9.4.044
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