Baryon squishing in synthetic dimensions by effective SU(M) gauge fields

Abstract

We investigate few body physics in a cold atomic system with synthetic dimensions (Celi et al., PRL 112, 043001 (2014)) which realizes a Hofstadter model with long-ranged interactions along the synthetic dimension. We show that the problem can be mapped to a system of particles (with SU(M) symmetric interactions) which experience an SU(M) Zeeman field at each lattice site and a non-Abelian SU(M) gauge potential that affects their hopping from one site to another. This mapping brings out the possibility of generating non-local interactions (interaction between particles at different physical sites). It also shows that the non-Abelian gauge field, which induces a flavor-orbital coupling, mitigates the "baryon breaking" effects of the Zeeman field. For M particles, the SU(M) singlet baryon which is site localized, is "deformed" to be a nonlocal object ("squished" baryon) by the combination of the Zeeman and the non-Abelian gauge potential, an effect that we conclusively demonstrate by analytical arguments and exact (numerical) diagonalization studies. These results not only promise a rich phase diagram in the many body setting, but also suggests possibility of using cold atom systems to address problems that are inconceivable in traditional condensed matter systems. As an example, we show that the system can be adapted to realize Hamiltonians akin to the SU(M) random flux model.

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