Emergent long-range interactions in Bose-Einstein Condensates
Abstract
We consider a massive complex scalar field with contact interactions with a source and show that, upon Bose-Einstein condensation, there is an emergent long-range interaction between sources. This interaction becomes long-range in the limit of vanishing self-interaction between Bose-Einstein constituents. More generally, the range is given by -1 λ n/m, with λ being the 2-body self-interaction coupling constant, n the particle number density in the condensate, and m the mass of the condensed particles. Naively this may sound surprising since in λ→ 0 limit gapless excitations of the condensate have dispersion relation ωk=k2/2m, yet for the mediated force we have F 1/r2. The reason behind this seemingly counterintuitive result lies in the fact that the force is being mediated by the phonon, which happens to acquire a nontrivial derivative interaction with the source. We discuss the potential ramifications of this observation for dark matter models. In particular, we show that this force can compete with gravity on galactic scales for a wide range of dark matter mass, provided that the interaction with baryons allows the presence of an extended dark matter condensate core. The effect could be of particular interest in ultra-light dark matter models, such as Fuzzy Dark Matter.
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