Temperature-Dependent Contact of Weakly Interacting Single-Component Fermi Gases and Loss Rate of Degenerate Polar Molecules

Xin-Yuan Gao, D. Blume, and Yangqian Yan
Phys. Rev. Lett. 131, 043401 – Published 25 July 2023

Abstract

Motivated by the experimental realization of single-component degenerate Fermi gases of polar ground state KRb molecules with intrinsic two-body losses [L. De Marco et al., A degenerate Fermi gas of polar molecules, Science 363, 853 (2019).], this work studies the finite-temperature loss rate of single-component Fermi gases with weak interactions. First, we establish a relationship between the two-body loss rate and the p-wave contact. Second, we evaluate the contact of the homogeneous system in the low-temperature regime using p-wave Fermi liquid theory and in the high-temperature regime using the second-order virial expansion. Third, conjecturing that there are no phase transitions between the two temperature regimes, we smoothly interpolate the results to intermediate temperatures. It is found that the contact is constant at temperatures close to zero and increases first quadratically with increasing temperature and finally—in agreement with the Bethe-Wigner threshold law—linearly at high temperatures. Fourth, applying the local-density approximation, we obtain the loss-rate coefficient for the harmonically trapped system, reproducing the experimental KRb loss measurements within a unified theoretical framework over a wide temperature regime without fitting parameters. Our results for the contact are not only applicable to molecular p-wave gases but also to atomic single-component Fermi gases, such as K40 and Li6.

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  • Received 13 March 2023
  • Revised 21 May 2023
  • Accepted 27 June 2023

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.131.043401

© 2023 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Atomic, Molecular & Optical

Authors & Affiliations

Xin-Yuan Gao1, D. Blume2,3, and Yangqian Yan1,4,*

  • 1Department of Physics, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, New Territories, Hong Kong, China
  • 2Homer L. Dodge Department of Physics and Astronomy, The University of Oklahoma, 440 W. Brooks Street, Norman, Oklahoma 73019, USA
  • 3Center for Quantum Research and Technology, The University of Oklahoma, 440 W. Brooks Street, Norman, Oklahoma 73019, USA
  • 4The Chinese University of Hong Kong Shenzhen Research Institute, 518057 Shenzhen, China

  • *yqyan@cuhk.edu.hk

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Vol. 131, Iss. 4 — 28 July 2023

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