Abstract

In this paper, we study-induced spin–orbit coupling (SOC) in one-dimensional ultracold quantum gases composed of atoms of different species. One species is subjected to an equal combination of Rashba and Dresselhaus SOC generated by Raman transition. The two species interact with each other through spin-independent and spin-exchange contact interactions. The spin-exchange interaction introduces a locking pattern of the momentum and spin degrees of freedom for the species without direct SOC. For small spin-independent interactions, the two species overlap and the induced SOC is effective. For large spin-independent interactions, however, the two species keep separate from each other and the induced SOC is negligible. We propose to generate inhomogeneous SOC by exploiting density engineering technique applied to the directly spin–orbit coupled Bose–Einstein condensate. When the effective potential is of Gaussian type, the single-particle eigenenergies and eigenstates are calculated by exact diagonalization method. For general cases, mean-field ground states are obtained by numerically searching for the minimum of energy functional. With the density engineering technique, it is possible to produce hybrid structures of plane wave, stripe and/or zero-momentum phases.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call