Zero Sound and First Sound in a Disk-Shaped Normal Fermi gas
Abstract
We study the zero sound and the first sound in a dilute and ultracold disk-shaped normal Fermi gas with a strong harmonic confinement along the axial direction and uniform in the two planar directions. Working at zero temperature we calculate the chemical potential μ of the fermionic fluid as a function of the uniform planar density and find that μ changes its slope in correspondence to the filling of harmonic axial modes (shell effects). Within the linear response theory, and under the random phase approximation, we calculate the velocity c0s of the zero sound. We find that also c0s changes its slope in correspondence of the filling of the harmonic axial modes and that this effect depends on the Fermi-Fermi scattering length aF. In the collisional regime, we calculate the velocity cs of first sound showing that cs displays jumps at critical densities fixed by the scattering length aF. Finally, we discuss the experimental achievability of these zero sound and first sound waves with ultracold alkali-metal atoms.
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