Marcus Lingham
Swinburne University of Technology
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Featured researches published by Marcus Lingham.
international quantum electronics conference | 2011
Paul Dyke; E. D. Kuhnle; S. Whitlock; Hui Hu; M. Mark; S. Hoinka; Marcus Lingham; Peter Hannaford; C. J. Vale
We have studied the transition from two to three dimensions in a low temperature weakly interacting 6Li Fermi gas. Below a critical atom number N(2D) only the lowest transverse vibrational state of a highly anisotropic oblate trapping potential is occupied and the gas is two dimensional. Above N(2D) the Fermi gas enters the quasi-2D regime where shell structure associated with the filling of individual transverse oscillator states is apparent. This dimensional crossover is demonstrated through measurements of the cloud size and aspect ratio versus atom number.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
K. Fenech; Paul Dyke; T. Peppler; Marcus Lingham; S. Hoinka; Hui Hu; C. J. Vale
Thermodynamic properties of matter are conveniently expressed as functional relations between variables known as equations of state. Here we experimentally determine the compressibility, density, and pressure equations of state for an attractive 2D Fermi gas in the normal phase as a function of temperature and interaction strength. In 2D, interacting gases exhibit qualitatively different features to those found in 3D. This is evident in the normalized density equation of state, which peaks at intermediate densities corresponding to the crossover from classical to quantum behavior.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
S. Hoinka; Marcus Lingham; M. Delehaye; C. J. Vale
We present an experimental investigation of the dynamic spin response of a strongly interacting Fermi gas using Bragg spectroscopy. By varying the detuning of the Bragg lasers, we show that it is possible to measure the response in the spin and density channels separately. At low Bragg energies, the spin response is suppressed due to pairing, whereas the density response is enhanced. These experiments yield the first independent measurements of the spin-parallel and spin-antiparallel dynamic and static structure factors, which provide insight into the different features of density and spin response functions. At high momentum the spin-antiparallel dynamic structure factor displays a universal high frequency tail, proportional to ω(-5/2), where ℏω is the probe energy.
Nature Physics | 2017
S. Hoinka; Paul Dyke; Marcus Lingham; Jami J. Kinnunen; Georg M. Bruun; C. J. Vale
Bragg spectroscopy shows the evolution of gapless Goldstone modes and single-particle-like excitations in an atomic Fermi superfluid as it crosses from a Bardeen–Cooper–Schrieffer superfluid to the Bose–Einstein condensate regime.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
Marcus Lingham; K. Fenech; S. Hoinka; C. J. Vale
We present measurements of the local (homogeneous) density-density response function of a Fermi gas at unitarity using spatially resolved Bragg spectroscopy. By analyzing the Bragg response across one axis of the cloud, we extract the response function for a uniform gas which shows a clear signature of the Bose-Einstein condensation of pairs of fermions when the local temperature drops below the superfluid transition temperature. The method we use for local measurement generalizes a scheme for obtaining the local pressure in a harmonically trapped cloud from the line density and can be adapted to provide any homogeneous parameter satisfying the local density approximation.
Journal of Modern Optics | 2016
Marcus Lingham; K. Fenech; T. Peppler; S. Hoinka; Paul Dyke; Peter Hannaford; C. J. Vale
This article provides an overview of recent developments and emerging topics in the study of two-component Fermi gases using Bragg spectroscopy. Bragg scattering is achieved by exposing a gas to two intersecting laser beams with a slight frequency difference and measuring the momentum transferred to the atoms. By varying the Bragg laser detuning, it is possible to measure either the density or spin response functions which characterize the basic excitations present in the gas. Specifically, one can measure properties such as the dynamic and static structure factors, Tan’s universal contact parameter and observe signatures for the onset of pair condensation locally within a gas.
international quantum electronics conference | 2011
S. Hoinka; M. Delehaye; E. D. Kuhnle; Paul Dyke; Marcus Lingham; K. Fenech; Hui Hu; Peter Hannaford; C. J. Vale
We report measurements showing the universal behaviour of the static structure factor and both the temperature and interaction dependence of pair correlations in a strongly interacting Fermi gas. We utilize Bragg spectroscopy to obtain the static structure factor by recording excitation spectra of trapped clouds of ultracold 6Li atoms. Our results show clear evidence of strong short-range pair correlations above the critical temperature for superfluidity through the BEC-BCS crossover and agree well with theoretical calculations.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
S. Hoinka; Marcus Lingham; K. Fenech; Hui Hu; C. J. Vale; Joaquín E. Drut; Stefano Gandolfi
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Christopher Vale; S. Hoinka; Paul Dyke; Marcus Lingham
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
Paul Dyke; K. Fenech; Tyson Peppler; Marcus Lingham; S. Hoinka; C. J. Vale