Nonequilibrium phenomena in superfluid systems: atomic nuclei, liquid helium, ultracold gases, and neutron stars
from
Monday 12 May 2025 (09:00)
to
Friday 16 May 2025 (19:00)
Monday 12 May 2025
10:00
Registration
Registration
10:00 - 10:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
10:30
Welcome
-
Ubirajara van Kolck
(
ECT*, Trento
)
Welcome
Ubirajara van Kolck
(
ECT*, Trento
)
10:30 - 10:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
10:45
Introduction
-
Giacomo Roati
(
University of Florence, LENS
)
Gabriel Wlazłowski
(
Warsaw University of Technology
)
Piotr Magierski
(
Warsaw University of Technology
)
Brynmor Haskell
(
Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center
)
Introduction
Giacomo Roati
(
University of Florence, LENS
)
Gabriel Wlazłowski
(
Warsaw University of Technology
)
Piotr Magierski
(
Warsaw University of Technology
)
Brynmor Haskell
(
Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center
)
10:45 - 11:15
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
11:15
COFFEE BREAK
COFFEE BREAK
11:15 - 11:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
11:45
Microscopic Models of Induced Fission Dynamics
-
Dario Vretenar
Microscopic Models of Induced Fission Dynamics
Dario Vretenar
11:45 - 12:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
Based on recent developments of time-dependent nuclear density functional theory (TD-DFT) and the time-dependent generator coordinate method (TD-GCM), significant advances in microscopic description of various aspects of induced fission dynamics have been reported. These include studies of the effect of fluctuations on fission observables, dynamics of neck formation and rupture, the energy dissipation mechanism and total kinetic energy distribution, fragment distributions and properties of fragments beyond scission. Finite-temperature effects have been considered in TD-DFT, while the TD-GCM has been generalized to include time-dependent generator states. With the coherent superposition of TD-DFT trajectories in the generalized TD-GCM, fission dynamics is described fully quantum mechanically in an approach that extends beyond the adiabatic approximation and includes quantum fluctuations.
12:30
Determining Fission Fragment Spin Properties Using Projection Techniques
-
Guillaume Scamps
Determining Fission Fragment Spin Properties Using Projection Techniques
Guillaume Scamps
12:30 - 13:00
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
13:00
Fluctuation-induced couplings between superfluids and boundary solids
-
Baptiste Coquinot
(
Institute of Science & Technology Austria (ISTA)
)
Fluctuation-induced couplings between superfluids and boundary solids
Baptiste Coquinot
(
Institute of Science & Technology Austria (ISTA)
)
13:00 - 13:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
This talk adresses the transport properties of superfluids like Helium II when taking into account the internal degrees of freedom of boundary solids. Indeed, superfluids have the special property of managing frictionless transport due to their absence of viscosity below a critical velocity. In such systems, the boundary solids are often described a simple boundary condition where the wavefunction of the fluid must be vanish. However this neglects that solids do have internal degrees of freedom which may couple with the excitation modes of the superfluid, leading to a friction at its boundaries even below the critical velocity. These fluctuation-induced effects, based on a retarded van der Waals interaction, have already been studied for solid-solid friction and more recently for room-temperature solid-liquid friction, leading to the discovery of exciting phenomena in the field of nanofluidics. Here, using a perturbative field theory, we explore these couplings at low temperature in the context of superfluids and determine what are the proper dynamical boundary conditions for the fluid. Thus, we investigate how mode couplings impact the exceptional transport properties of superfluids.
13:30
LUNCH
LUNCH
13:30 - 14:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
14:45
Electrodynamics of vortices in quasi-two-dimensional scalar Bose-Einstein condensates
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Seongho Shin
(
University of Luxembourg
)
Electrodynamics of vortices in quasi-two-dimensional scalar Bose-Einstein condensates
Seongho Shin
(
University of Luxembourg
)
14:45 - 15:15
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
15:15
15:15 - 16:00
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
16:00
COFFEE BREAK
COFFEE BREAK
16:00 - 16:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
16:30
Real-time non-equilibrium dissipative dynamic of strongly interacting many-fermion systems
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Aurel Bulgac
Real-time non-equilibrium dissipative dynamic of strongly interacting many-fermion systems
Aurel Bulgac
16:30 - 17:15
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
Tuesday 13 May 2025
09:15
When polarons discover their statistics in two dimensions
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Pierbiagio Pieri
(
University of Bologna & Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare
)
When polarons discover their statistics in two dimensions
Pierbiagio Pieri
(
University of Bologna & Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare
)
09:15 - 10:00
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
I will present recent results on two-dimensional systems: 2D polarized Fermi gases evolving from the polaronic limit to an FFLO instability and 2D mixtures of fermions and bosons. In the latter case I will discuss the fate of Fermi polarons obeying Bose statistics when their concentration gets finite.
10:00
Sound and Doppler effect in Supersolids
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Alessio Recati
(
INO-CNR BEC Center
)
Sound and Doppler effect in Supersolids
Alessio Recati
(
INO-CNR BEC Center
)
10:00 - 10:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
10:45
A single superconducting vortex on a leash: thermodynamics and applications
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Maciej Zgirski
(
Institute of Physics, PAN
)
A single superconducting vortex on a leash: thermodynamics and applications
Maciej Zgirski
(
Institute of Physics, PAN
)
10:45 - 11:15
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
We introduce the Single Vortex Box (SVB) – a nanodevice that allows to treat a single superconducting vortex as a macroscopic, yet quantized, “particle” that can be created and annihilated on demand using electrical current pulses[1]. By applying fast, nanosecond-resolving switching thermometry [2], we measure the temperature rise and the subsequent thermal relaxation resulting from the expulsion of just a single magnetic vortex from the aluminum SVB. Our experiment provides a calorimetric estimation of the energy dissipated in a superconductor due to a single moving vortex – a fundamentally important measurement that has never been accomplished before due to the lack of appropriate tools. Our pioneering demonstration is also a pivotal step towards the development of the vortex-based electronics including memory cells, superconducting diodes, logic elements, and heat valves. We raise a fundamental question: does the vortex dissipate energy as it moves across the superconducting strip, or is dissipation triggered only when the vortex is annihilated? [1] M. Foltyn, K. Norowski, A. Savin, M. Zgirski, Quantum thermodynamics with a single superconducting vortex, Science Advances 10, eado4032 (2024). [2] M. Zgirski, M. Foltyn, A. Savin, A. Naumov, K. Norowski, Heat Hunting in a Freezer: Direct Measurement of Quasiparticle Diffusion in Superconducting Nanowire, Phys. Rev. Applied 14, 044024 (2020)
11:15
COFFEE BREAK
COFFEE BREAK
11:15 - 11:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
11:45
Vortex dynamics in strongly-interacting atomic Fermi superfluids: from few to many
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Giulia Del Pace
(
University of Florence
)
Vortex dynamics in strongly-interacting atomic Fermi superfluids: from few to many
Giulia Del Pace
(
University of Florence
)
11:45 - 12:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
The dynamics of quantized vortices underlies many phenomena of different quantum systems, from superconductors to neutron stars, and represent a particularly hard problem to tackle in fermionic systems. In this talk I will report a series of experiments on vortex dynamics in strongly-interacting Fermi superfluids, highly controllable systems where the dynamic of vortices can be studied in a bottom-up approach. Thanks to a micron-scale control over the external potential acting of the superfluid, we can arrange arbitrary configurations of vortices. We create on-demand vortex dipoles, namely a vortex-antivortex pair, representing the minimal configuration to study vortex motion and dissipative dynamics. By tracking the motion of a single vortex-dipole we measure the transverse and longitudinal mutual friction components characterizing the motion of vortices at finite temperature. Then, by adding a second vortex-dipole we engineer controlled dipole-dipole collision and unveil the interaction of vortices with sound excitations in the superfluid. Finally, we create an ordered structure of many vortices of the same charge by merging two counterflowing concentric superfluids, and we study the stability of such a vortex necklace. For large number of vortices, the symmetry is broken by vortex pairing in small clusters, occurring with a growth rate that follows the same scaling of the classical Kelvin-Helmholtz instability, characterizing the merging of counterflowing fluids.
12:30
Quantum vortices leave a macroscopic signature in the thermal background
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Luca Galantucci
(
Istituto per le Applicazioni del Calcolo, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (IAC-CNR)
)
Quantum vortices leave a macroscopic signature in the thermal background
Luca Galantucci
(
Istituto per le Applicazioni del Calcolo, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (IAC-CNR)
)
12:30 - 13:00
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
13:00
Strongly dissipative vortex dynamics in the holographic superfluid
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Carlo Ewerz
(
EMMI, GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung
)
Strongly dissipative vortex dynamics in the holographic superfluid
Carlo Ewerz
(
EMMI, GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung
)
13:00 - 13:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
Holography or gauge/gravity duality provides a novel description of a strongly coupled superfluid via a gravitational theory in a higher-dimensional curved space-time with a black hole. Vortex dynamics in the holographic superfluid exhibits strong dissipation in the range of real-world superfluids. The talk gives an overview of various aspects of dissipative vortex dynamics and quantum turbulence in 2 and 3 dimensions, based on numerical real-time simulations of the holographic superfluid.
13:30
CONFERENCE PHOTO
CONFERENCE PHOTO
13:30 - 13:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
13:45
LUNCH
LUNCH
13:45 - 14:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
14:45
Fermion pairs and loners under the microscope
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Martin Zwierlein
(
MIT
)
Fermion pairs and loners under the microscope
Martin Zwierlein
(
MIT
)
14:45 - 15:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
15:30
Inertial effects in superfluid vortex dynamics
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Andrea Richaud
(
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya
)
Inertial effects in superfluid vortex dynamics
Andrea Richaud
(
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya
)
15:30 - 16:00
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
16:00
COFFEE BREAK
COFFEE BREAK
16:00 - 16:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
16:30
16:30 - 17:00
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
17:00
POSTER SESSION
POSTER SESSION
17:00 - 18:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
Wednesday 14 May 2025
09:15
Learning about Neutron Star Interiors
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Vanessa Graber
(
Royal Holloway, University of London
)
Learning about Neutron Star Interiors
Vanessa Graber
(
Royal Holloway, University of London
)
09:15 - 10:00
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
Neutron stars are compact celestial objects that offer the unique opportunity to explore matter and its interactions under conditions that cannot be reproduced elsewhere in the Universe. Their extreme gravitational, rotational and magnetic energy reservoirs fuel their diverse emission properties, which are visible across the electromagnetic waveband as well as the gravitational wave window. However, accurately measuring global neutron-star properties such as mass, radius, and moment of inertia poses significant challenges. Probing internal characteristics such as the crustal composition or superfluid physics is even more complex. In this talk, I will provide an overview of the various methods we use to measure global and small-scale neutron star characteristics and their underlying assumptions. I will discuss where astrophysicists employ independent methods and adopt multimessenger approaches to gather complementary data from observable phenomena. I will specifically highlight where observations provide insights into the nature of superfluid and superconducting phases of matter, setting the stage for further related discussions during this workshop.
10:00
Restless neutron stars: timing noise and pulsar glitches
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Marco Antonelli
(
CNRS / LPC Caen
)
Restless neutron stars: timing noise and pulsar glitches
Marco Antonelli
(
CNRS / LPC Caen
)
10:00 - 10:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
Superfluidity impacts the dynamics of rotating neutron stars. The presence of superfluids in neutron stars is an important ingredient in models of pulsar glitches, oscillation modes, cooling of old pulsars and, possibly, even timing noise. I will discuss how simulations of quantised vortices can help us to understand how superfluid momentum is transported in neutron stars, and their relevance for the astrophysical phenomena of pulsar glitches and timing noise.
10:45
Energy dissipation in the superfluid interior of neutron stars
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Daniel Pęcak
(
Institute of Physics, Polish Academy of Sciences
)
Energy dissipation in the superfluid interior of neutron stars
Daniel Pęcak
(
Institute of Physics, Polish Academy of Sciences
)
10:45 - 11:15
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
11:15
COFFEE BREAK
COFFEE BREAK
11:15 - 11:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
11:45
Rotating dipolar supersolids: from synchronous motion to neutron-star type glitches
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Elena Poli
(
Innsbruck University
)
Rotating dipolar supersolids: from synchronous motion to neutron-star type glitches
Elena Poli
(
Innsbruck University
)
11:45 - 12:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
12:30
Superfluid fraction in the inner crust of neutron stars
-
Giorgio Almirante
(
IJCLab
)
Superfluid fraction in the inner crust of neutron stars
Giorgio Almirante
(
IJCLab
)
12:30 - 13:00
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
In the inner crust of neutron stars, exotic nuclear clusters are probably arranged in a periodic lattice, and surrounded by a superfluid gas of unbound neutrons. The superfluid component of the crust is involved in some of the mechanisms to explain pulsar glitches. But, for the comparison with observations, one needs to know the neutron superfluid fraction. In order to compute it, the crucial point is the evaluation of the so-called “entrainment”, that is a non-dissipative force between the superfluid component and the lattice. Attempts to compute it have been done in the context of band theory without explicitly including superfluidity [1], leading to values of the superfluid fraction too small to explain observed Vela glitches [2][3]. However, the validity of this approximation in the neutron star crust has been questioned [4][5]. Moreover, there is a strong tension between these band theory calculations and what one obtains in the formalism of superfluid hydrodynamics [6]. In order to solve this issue, we analyzed the inner crust of neutron stars within the Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov framework, in the lasagna [7] and spaghetti [8] phase. Recently, we also extended our formalism to the 3D crystal case. In order to well describe the interplay between band structure and superfluidity, periodicity of the lattice has been taken into account using Bloch boundary conditions. By introducing a stationary relative flow between clusters and the surrounding neutron gas, we computed the actual neutron superfluid fraction. Our results are significantly larger than previous ones obtained in normal band theory. Also, we found the analytical explanation why the obtained entrainment is in reality much weaker than in normal band theory calculations. [1] N. Chamel, Phys. Rev. C 85, 035801 (2012). [2] N. Andersson, K. Glampedakis, W. C. G. Ho, and C. M. Espinoza, Phys. Rev. Lett. 109, 241103 (2012). [3] N. Chamel, Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, 011101 (2013). [4] G. Watanabe and C.J. Pethick, Phys. Rev. Lett. 119, 062701 (2017). [5] Y. Minami and G. Watanabe, Phys. Rev. Res. 4, 033141 (2022). [6] N. Martin and M. Urban, Phys. Rev. C 94, 065801 (2016). [7] G. Almirante and M. Urban, Phys. Rev. C 109, 045805 (2024). [8] G. Almirante and M. Urban, Phys. Rev. C 110, 065802 (2024).
13:00
Superfluid hydrodynamics in neutron stars
-
Valentin Allard
(
Warsaw University of Technology
)
Superfluid hydrodynamics in neutron stars
Valentin Allard
(
Warsaw University of Technology
)
13:00 - 13:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
13:30
LUNCH
LUNCH
13:30 - 14:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
14:45
Box-trapped fermions out of equilibrium: emergence of sound, driven polarons and Fermi’s golden rule
-
Nir Navon
Box-trapped fermions out of equilibrium: emergence of sound, driven polarons and Fermi’s golden rule
Nir Navon
14:45 - 15:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
The realization of homogeneous quantum gases trapped in optical boxes has been a milestone in quantum simulation [1]. These textbook systems are proving to be powerful playground to study out of equilibrium physics in clean settings. I will present some of our recent works on driven uniform Fermi systems: the strong-drive spectroscopy of Fermi polarons [2], the measurement of the Lindhard response [3], and the observation of the emergence and breakdown of Fermi’s golden rule in a driven universal Fermi gas. [1] N. Navon, R.P. Smith, Z. Hadzibabic, Nature Phys. 17, 1334 (2021) [2] F.J. Vivanco et al., Nature Phys. 21, 564 (2025) [3] S. Huang et al., Phys. Rev. X 15, 011074 (2025) [4] J. Chen et al., arXiv:2502.14867 (2025)
15:30
Exploring the role of impurities on the supercurrent stability in atomic superfluid rings
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Klejdja Xhani
(
Politecnico di Torino, Dipartimento Scienza Applicata e Tecnologia
)
Exploring the role of impurities on the supercurrent stability in atomic superfluid rings
Klejdja Xhani
(
Politecnico di Torino, Dipartimento Scienza Applicata e Tecnologia
)
15:30 - 16:00
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
Persistent currents are long-lived metastable states characterized by quantized circulation, denoted by the winding number w. The main topic of this talk is the investigation of the stability of these supercurrents in the presence of impurities and throughout the BEC-BCS crossover. For this purpose, we solve the Gross-Pitaevskii equation in the BEC regime and employ a time-dependent density functional theory for the unitary Fermi gas (UFG) and BCS limits. Our results show that when the initial winding number w0 exceeds a critical value, the supercurrent becomes unstable and w, as well as the flow energy or current, decays over time. The dissipation mechanism associated with vortex generation is present across all interaction regimes; however, in the BEC limit, it is the sole mechanism responsible for the decay of the persistent current. In contrast, in the UFG and BCS regimes, an additional dissipation channel emerges—the pair-breaking mechanism—which reduces the superfluid fraction and thus the current stability. Notably, vortex emission in the BCS regime is accompanied by Cooper pair breaking that extends beyond the vortex core. This pair-breaking process prevents the imprinting of a persistent current with a winding number above a threshold, whose value decreases as the system approaches the BCS regime. Furthermore, we explore how the number and distribution of impurities affect the critical winding number and the dissipation of flow energy. We find that in the BEC limit, the critical winding number increases with impurity density, whereas near the BCS regime, it is constrained by the pair-breaking threshold regardless of impurity characteristics.
16:00
COFFEE BREAK
COFFEE BREAK
16:00 - 16:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
16:30
16:30 - 17:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
19:30
CONFERENCE DINNER
CONFERENCE DINNER
19:30 - 22:30
Thursday 15 May 2025
09:15
Exploring Turbulence and Interference with Cold Atoms
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Michael Forbes
(
Washington State University
)
Exploring Turbulence and Interference with Cold Atoms
Michael Forbes
(
Washington State University
)
09:15 - 10:00
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
In this talk I will discuss some results related to turbulence and interference motivated by cold-atom experiments here at WSU.
10:00
Transition to rotating quantum turbulence
-
Mathieu Gibert
(
Institut Néel CNRS
)
Transition to rotating quantum turbulence
Mathieu Gibert
(
Institut Néel CNRS
)
10:00 - 10:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
10:45
Modelling Superfluid Dynamics in Neutron Stars in 2D and 3D
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Julie Jacob Thomas
(
Newcastle University
)
Modelling Superfluid Dynamics in Neutron Stars in 2D and 3D
Julie Jacob Thomas
(
Newcastle University
)
10:45 - 11:15
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
Neutron stars are the collapsed cores of massive stars that have undergone a supernova explosion. They are the densest known astrophysical objects, with a mass typically 1.4 times that of the Sun compressed into a radius of approximately 10 km. Deep within the star, where the density exceeds the nuclear equilibrium density, neutrons become superfluid and protons become superconducting. As a result, the star’s rotation and magnetic flux become are quantised into extremely thin vortices and fluxtubes respectively. These vortices pin to nuclear lattice sites or defects in the star’s crust. When the star’s rotation rate slows down, the vortices move outward to conserve angular momentum. At the same time, these vortices unpin and self-reorganise to release the stored angular momentum in catastrophic discrete events known as rotational glitches which are observed as an instantaneous increase in the observed rotation rate of pulsars. A complete theory of the micro and macroscale superfluid dynamics to explain this phenomenon does not yet exist and current theoretical models are hampered by an incomplete understanding of the interactions between superfluid vortices, fluxtubes and crustal nuclei. For this talk, I will be concentrating on some of our recent results in two-dimensionally modelling the vortex dynamics in a neutron-star using the point vortex model. The current focus of this work is to explore the behaviour of a lattice of vortices within a grid of pinning sites by statistically studying their collective unpinning behaviour as it undergoes linear spin down.
11:15
COFFEE BREAK
COFFEE BREAK
11:15 - 11:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
11:45
Surprising vortex dynamics in superfluid 3He: Strong pinning, vortex sheets and wave turbulence
-
Vladimir Eltsov
(
Aalto University
)
Surprising vortex dynamics in superfluid 3He: Strong pinning, vortex sheets and wave turbulence
Vladimir Eltsov
(
Aalto University
)
11:45 - 12:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
Fermionic p-wave superfluid 3He is known to host various kinds of quantized vortices, including half-, single- and double-quantum. Regular motion of such vortices through the fluid is well understood: It is governed by the mutual friction, which originates in interaction of vortex-core-bound fermions with bulk quasiparticles. I present three examples of less usual vortex dynamics observed experimentally: 1) In the polar phase of superfluid 3He, containing nodal line in the energy spectrum, vortices are easily pinned in the confining matrix of solid nanostrands, used to stabilize the polar phase. This may provide the best laboratory model for vortices in a neutron star interacting with the crust. 2) Dynamically driven transition from vortex lines to vortex sheets in the A phase, where moving vortex structures create synthetic electromagnetic field for Bogoliubov quasiparticles, which are Weyl fermions in the A phase. 3) Development of Kelvin waves (KWs) and KW-turbulence on vortices in the B phase, where the gap in the energy spectrum allows suppression of bulk quasiparticles and mutual friction at the lowest temperatures. KWs are believed to be an essential energy transfer mechanism in the ultra-low-temperature quantum turbulence. In a Fermi superfluid, KWs additionally interact with the core-bound states, overheating them.
12:30
Observation of distinct dynamical scalings in turbulent Bose-Einstein condensates
-
Lucas Madeira
(
ECT*
)
Observation of distinct dynamical scalings in turbulent Bose-Einstein condensates
Lucas Madeira
(
ECT*
)
12:30 - 13:00
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
13:00
Kelvin-Helmholtz Instability in atomic Fermi superfluids: short and long term dynamics
-
Diego Hernandez Rajkov
(
LENS
)
Kelvin-Helmholtz Instability in atomic Fermi superfluids: short and long term dynamics
Diego Hernandez Rajkov
(
LENS
)
13:00 - 13:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
13:30
LUNCH
LUNCH
13:30 - 14:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
14:45
Laboratory neutron star analogues in the two-dimensional vacuum of superfluid 3He
-
Samuli Autti
(
Lancaster University
)
Laboratory neutron star analogues in the two-dimensional vacuum of superfluid 3He
Samuli Autti
(
Lancaster University
)
14:45 - 15:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
15:30
Vortex Avalanches in Neutron Stars
-
Gary Liu
(
Newcastle University
)
Vortex Avalanches in Neutron Stars
Gary Liu
(
Newcastle University
)
15:30 - 16:00
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
Rotational glitches can result from the angular momentum exchange between the curst and neutron star interiors. We study the dynamics of about 600 quantum vortices in a spinning-down two-dimensional neutron superfluid using the Gross--Pitaevskii model. For the first time, we find convincing spatial-temporal evidence of avalanching behaviour with about 10-20 vortices in each event resulting from vortex depinning and collective motion, during glitches and their post-evolutions. In the later stage, vortices continue to depin and circulate around the vorticity void in a similar manner to that seen in previous point-vortex simulations. We also demonstrate the exponential and power-law distributions in the avalanche waiting time and size under a controllable setup. Lastly, we comment on the challenge of extrapolating these results to conditions in real neutron stars, which contain many orders of magnitude more vortices.
16:00
COFFEE BREAK
COFFEE BREAK
16:00 - 16:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
16:30
16:30 - 17:30
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
Friday 16 May 2025
09:15
Stabilizing Solitonic Dynamics of Ultracold Gases in the BCS-BEC crossover
-
Santiago Francisco Caballero-Benitez
(
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
)
Stabilizing Solitonic Dynamics of Ultracold Gases in the BCS-BEC crossover
Santiago Francisco Caballero-Benitez
(
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
)
09:15 - 09:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
We develop a time dependent effective theory based on the PLDA theory [1] for the ground state behaviour of the order parameter of fermions in the BCS-BEC crossover. Our approach is computationally efficient and paves the way to compare with elaborated experimental implementations. With our time dependent theory we study the stability of dark soliton [2,3] solutions at T=0 across the BCS-BEC crossover. We discuss how one can stabilize density fluctuations arising due to non-linear mismatch while seeding the soliton and extend the lifetime of the soliton profile. We analyze possible escenarios relevant for the implementation with ultracold fermions using Spatial Light Modulators (SLM) and Digital Micromirror Devices (DMD). Our dynamical treatment can be extended to include additional corrections as with mPLDA theory[4,5] and finite temperature. This work is partially supported by the grant UNAM-DGAPA-PAPIIT:IN118823, as well as by grants from NVIDIA and utilized NVIDIA RTX 6000 Ada. [1] S. Simonucci and G. C. Strinati, Phys. Rev.B 89, 054511 (2014) [2] A. Cetoli, J. Brand, R. G. Scott, F. Dalfovo, and L. P. Pitaevskii, Phys. Rev. A 88, 043639 (2013) [3] M. D. Reichl and E. J. Mueller, Phys. Rev. A 95, 053637 (2017) [4] L. Pisani ,V. Piselli, and G. C. Strinati, Phys. Rev B 108, 214503 (2023) [5] L. Pisani ,V. Piselli, and G. C. Strinati, Phys. Rev. B 108, 214504 (2023)
09:45
Instability dynamics in immiscible binary Bose-Einstein condensates under constant forces
-
LAURO TOMIO
(
Instituto de Física Teórica, UNESP
)
Instability dynamics in immiscible binary Bose-Einstein condensates under constant forces
LAURO TOMIO
(
Instituto de Física Teórica, UNESP
)
09:45 - 10:15
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
Considering the initially immiscible configuration of homogeneous binary Bose-Einstein condensates confined in a two-dimensional circular box, I will report the results of some investigations we have carried out considering the emergence of Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) and Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) instabilities.
10:15
Vortices in Immiscible Mixtures of Bose Einstein Condensates
-
Ryan Doran
(
Newcastle University
)
Vortices in Immiscible Mixtures of Bose Einstein Condensates
Ryan Doran
(
Newcastle University
)
10:15 - 10:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
Immiscible superfluid mixtures have been shown to display a wider variety of exotic dynamics than their single component counterparts. Here we consider the mean-field vortex solutions and their stability within a two-component Bose-Einstein condensate in the immiscible limit. We begin by systematically study the dynamics of a binary immiscible Bose-Einstein condensate in two dimensions, where a small bubble of the second component is used to “stir” the first component. We rigorously map out the critical velocity for vortex shedding as a function of the size of the bubble, in analogy to the critical velocity of a laser spoon. Observing that the dynamics of the system depend on the initial size and velocity of the bubble, we then show that a dimensionless parameter with the same form as the Weber number (a dimensionless parameter that characterizes the flow of a multiphase classical fluid) accurately predicts the resulting bubble fragmentation.
10:45
Structure and Dynamics of Pairing Field in Unconventional Fermi Superfluids
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Buğra Tüzemen
(
Institute of Physics Polish Academy of Sciences
)
Structure and Dynamics of Pairing Field in Unconventional Fermi Superfluids
Buğra Tüzemen
(
Institute of Physics Polish Academy of Sciences
)
10:45 - 11:15
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
11:15
COFFEE BREAK
COFFEE BREAK
11:15 - 11:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi
13:30
LUNCH
LUNCH
13:30 - 14:45
Room: Aula Renzo Leonardi