Spinor Bose-Einstein condensate as an analog simulator of molecular bending vibrations
Spinor Bose-Einstein condensate as an analog simulator of molecular bending vibrations
We demonstrate that spinor Bose-Einstein condensates (BEC) can be operated as an analog simulator of the two-dimensional vibron model. This algebraic model for the description of bending and stretching vibrations of molecules, in the case of a triatomic molecules, exhibits two phases where linear and bent configurations are stabilised. Spinor BECs can be engineered to simulate states that correspond to linear or bent triatomic molecules, with the BEC's Wigner function encoding information about the molecular configuration. We show how quantum simulations of the bending dynamics of linear molecules can be realized, and how the straightening of a bent molecule leads to a dynamical instability. In the dynamics triggered by the corresponding instability, a significant amount of entanglement is generated, and we characterise the dynamics with the squeezing parameter and the quantum Fisher information (QFI). The scaling of the non-Gaussian sensitivity, described by the difference between squeezing and QFI, grows with the system size once the spinor system crosses from the linear to the bent phase, thus serving as a dynamical witness for the quantum phase transition.
Ayaka Usui、Artur Niezgoda、Manuel Gessner
物理学
Ayaka Usui,Artur Niezgoda,Manuel Gessner.Spinor Bose-Einstein condensate as an analog simulator of molecular bending vibrations[EB/OL].(2025-05-26)[2025-06-30].https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.19836.点此复制
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