{"title":"玻色子量子气体中的杂质和极化子:最新进展综述。","authors":"F Grusdt, N Mostaan, E Demler, L A P Ardila","doi":"10.1088/1361-6633/add94b","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>This review describes the field of Bose polarons, arising when mobile impurities are immersed into a bosonic quantum gas. The latter can be realized by a Bose-Einstein condensate of ultracold atoms, or of exciton polaritons in a semiconductor, which has led to a series of experimental observations of Bose polarons near inter-species Feshbach resonances that we survey. Following an introduction to the topic, with references to its historic roots and a presentation of the Bose polaron Hamiltonian, we summarize state-of-the-art experiments. Next we provide a detailed discussion of polaron models, starting from the ubiquitous Fröhlich Hamiltonian that applies at weak couplings. Already this highly simplified model allows insights into ultra-violet divergencies, logarithmic and power-law, that need to be properly regularized. To capture the physics near a Feshbach resonance, two-phonon scattering terms on the impurity as well as phonon-phonon interactions need to be included. We proceed by a survey of concurrent theoretical methods used for solving strongly interacting Bose polaron problems, ranging from Lee-Low-Pines mean-field theory, Chevy-ansatz, Gross-Pitaevskii-equation to diagrammatic Monte Carlo approaches. The subsequent sections are devoted to the large bodies of work investigating strong coupling Bose polarons, including detailed comparisons with radio-frequency spectra obtained in ultracold atom experiments; to investigations of universal few-body and Efimov states associated with a Feshbach resonance in atomic mixtures; to studies of quantum dynamics and polarons out of equilibrium; Bose polarons in low-dimensional 1D and 2D quantum systems; induced interactions among polarons and bipolaron formation; and to Bose polarons at non-zero temperatures. We end our review by detailed discussions of closely related experimental setups and systems, including ionic impurities, systems with strong light-matter interactions, and variations and extensions of the Bose polaron concepts e.g. to baths with topological order or strong interactions relevant for correlated electrons. Finally, an outlook is presented, highlighting possible future research directions and open questions in the field as a whole.</p>","PeriodicalId":74666,"journal":{"name":"Reports on progress in physics. 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Following an introduction to the topic, with references to its historic roots and a presentation of the Bose polaron Hamiltonian, we summarize state-of-the-art experiments. Next we provide a detailed discussion of polaron models, starting from the ubiquitous Fröhlich Hamiltonian that applies at weak couplings. Already this highly simplified model allows insights into ultra-violet divergencies, logarithmic and power-law, that need to be properly regularized. To capture the physics near a Feshbach resonance, two-phonon scattering terms on the impurity as well as phonon-phonon interactions need to be included. We proceed by a survey of concurrent theoretical methods used for solving strongly interacting Bose polaron problems, ranging from Lee-Low-Pines mean-field theory, Chevy-ansatz, Gross-Pitaevskii-equation to diagrammatic Monte Carlo approaches. The subsequent sections are devoted to the large bodies of work investigating strong coupling Bose polarons, including detailed comparisons with radio-frequency spectra obtained in ultracold atom experiments; to investigations of universal few-body and Efimov states associated with a Feshbach resonance in atomic mixtures; to studies of quantum dynamics and polarons out of equilibrium; Bose polarons in low-dimensional 1D and 2D quantum systems; induced interactions among polarons and bipolaron formation; and to Bose polarons at non-zero temperatures. We end our review by detailed discussions of closely related experimental setups and systems, including ionic impurities, systems with strong light-matter interactions, and variations and extensions of the Bose polaron concepts e.g. to baths with topological order or strong interactions relevant for correlated electrons. Finally, an outlook is presented, highlighting possible future research directions and open questions in the field as a whole.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":74666,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Reports on progress in physics. Physical Society (Great Britain)\",\"volume\":\" \",\"pages\":\"\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2025-06-12\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Reports on progress in physics. 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Impurities and polarons in bosonic quantum gases: a review on recent progress.
This review describes the field of Bose polarons, arising when mobile impurities are immersed into a bosonic quantum gas. The latter can be realized by a Bose-Einstein condensate of ultracold atoms, or of exciton polaritons in a semiconductor, which has led to a series of experimental observations of Bose polarons near inter-species Feshbach resonances that we survey. Following an introduction to the topic, with references to its historic roots and a presentation of the Bose polaron Hamiltonian, we summarize state-of-the-art experiments. Next we provide a detailed discussion of polaron models, starting from the ubiquitous Fröhlich Hamiltonian that applies at weak couplings. Already this highly simplified model allows insights into ultra-violet divergencies, logarithmic and power-law, that need to be properly regularized. To capture the physics near a Feshbach resonance, two-phonon scattering terms on the impurity as well as phonon-phonon interactions need to be included. We proceed by a survey of concurrent theoretical methods used for solving strongly interacting Bose polaron problems, ranging from Lee-Low-Pines mean-field theory, Chevy-ansatz, Gross-Pitaevskii-equation to diagrammatic Monte Carlo approaches. The subsequent sections are devoted to the large bodies of work investigating strong coupling Bose polarons, including detailed comparisons with radio-frequency spectra obtained in ultracold atom experiments; to investigations of universal few-body and Efimov states associated with a Feshbach resonance in atomic mixtures; to studies of quantum dynamics and polarons out of equilibrium; Bose polarons in low-dimensional 1D and 2D quantum systems; induced interactions among polarons and bipolaron formation; and to Bose polarons at non-zero temperatures. We end our review by detailed discussions of closely related experimental setups and systems, including ionic impurities, systems with strong light-matter interactions, and variations and extensions of the Bose polaron concepts e.g. to baths with topological order or strong interactions relevant for correlated electrons. Finally, an outlook is presented, highlighting possible future research directions and open questions in the field as a whole.