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Phys. Rev. A 79, 023623 (2009) [8 pages]

Fermionization of a strongly interacting Bose-Fermi mixture in a one-dimensional harmonic trap

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Bess Fang1,2, Patrizia Vignolo3, Christian Miniatura1,2,3,4, and Anna Minguzzi5
1Department of Physics, Block S12, Faculty of Science, National University of Singapore, 2 Science Drive 3, Singapore 117542, Singapore
2Centre for Quantum Technologies, National University of Singapore, 3 Science Drive 2, Singapore 117543, Singapore
3Université de Nice–Sophia Antipolis, Institut Non Linéaire de Nice, CNRS; 1361 route des Lucioles, 06560 Valbonne, France
4IPAL, CNRS, 12R, 1 Fusionopolis Way, Singapore 138632, Singapore
5Université Joseph Fourier, Laboratoire de Physique et Modélisation des Milieux Condensés, CNRS; BP 166, 38042 Grenoble, France

Received 25 September 2008; published 26 February 2009

We consider a strongly interacting one-dimensional (1D) Bose-Fermi mixture confined in a harmonic trap. It consists of a Tonks-Girardeau (TG) gas (1D Bose gas with repulsive hard-core interactions) and of a noninteracting Fermi gas (1D spin-aligned Fermi gas), both species interacting through hard-core repulsive interactions. Using a generalized Bose-Fermi mapping, we determine the one-body density matrices, exact particle density profiles, momentum distributions, and behavior of the mixture under 1D expansion when opening the trap. In real space, bosons and fermions do not display any phase separation: the respective density profiles extend over the same region and they both present a number of peaks equal to the total number of particles in the trap. In momentum space the bosonic component has the typical narrow TG profile, while the fermionic component shows a broad distribution with fermionic oscillations at small momenta. Due to the large boson-fermion repulsive interactions, both the bosonic and the fermionic momentum distributions decay as Cp−4 at large momenta, like in the case of a pure bosonic TG gas. The coefficient C is related to the two-body density matrix and to the bosonic concentration in the mixture. When opening the trap, both momentum distributions “fermionize” under expansion and turn into that of a Fermi gas with a particle number equal to the total number of particles in the mixture.

© 2009 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevA.79.023623
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevA.79.023623
PACS:
03.75.Lm, 03.75.Ss, 05.30.−d, 67.85.Pq