Abstract
We report the realization of correlated, density-dependent tunneling for fermionic atoms trapped in an optical lattice. By appropriately tuning the frequency difference between a pair of Raman beams applied to a spin-polarized gas, simultaneous spin transitions and tunneling events are induced that depend on the relative occupations of neighboring lattice sites. This correlated spin-flip tunneling (CSFT) is spectroscopically resolved using gases prepared in opposite spin states, and the inferred Hubbard interaction energy is compared with a tight-binding prediction. We measure the doublons created by the laser-induced correlated tunneling process using loss induced by light-assisted collisions. Furthermore, by controllably introducing vacancies to a spin-polarized gas, we demonstrate that correlated tunneling is suppressed when neighboring lattice sites are unoccupied. We explain how the CSFT quench implemented here prepares and evolves a large number of resonating-valence-bond (RVB) singlets in a Hubbard model, thus allowing exploration of RVB dynamics.
3 More- Received 4 November 2017
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.98.023623
©2018 American Physical Society