Higgs mode in a strongly interacting fermionic superfluid

Higgs and Goldstone modes are possible collective modes of an order parameter on spontaneously breaking a continuous symmetry. Whereas the low-energy Goldstone (phase) mode is always stable, additional symmetries are required to prevent the Higgs (amplitude) mode from rapidly decaying into low-energ...

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Published inNature physics Vol. 14; no. 8; pp. 781 - 785
Main Authors Behrle, A., Harrison, T., Kombe, J., Gao, K., Link, M., Bernier, J.-S., Kollath, C., Köhl, M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 01.08.2018
Nature Publishing Group
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Summary:Higgs and Goldstone modes are possible collective modes of an order parameter on spontaneously breaking a continuous symmetry. Whereas the low-energy Goldstone (phase) mode is always stable, additional symmetries are required to prevent the Higgs (amplitude) mode from rapidly decaying into low-energy excitations. In high-energy physics, where the Higgs boson 1 has been found after a decades-long search, the stability is ensured by Lorentz invariance. In the realm of condensed-matter physics, particle–hole symmetry can play this role 2 and a Higgs mode has been observed in weakly interacting superconductors 3 – 5 . However, whether the Higgs mode is also stable for strongly correlated superconductors in which particle–hole symmetry is not precisely fulfilled or whether this mode becomes overdamped has been the subject of numerous discussions 6 – 11 . Experimental evidence is still lacking, in particular owing to the difficulty of exciting the Higgs mode directly. Here, we observe the Higgs mode in a strongly interacting superfluid Fermi gas. By inducing a periodic modulation of the amplitude of the superconducting order parameter Δ, we observe an excitation resonance at the frequency 2Δ/ h . For strong coupling, the peak width broadens and eventually the mode disappears when the Cooper pairs turn into tightly bound dimers signalling the eventual instability of the Higgs mode. An off-resonant radiofrequency modulation scheme applied to a strongly interacting superfluid Fermi gas reveals the presence of a Higgs mode — an oscillation of the amplitude of the superconducting order parameter.
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ISSN:1745-2473
1745-2481
DOI:10.1038/s41567-018-0128-6