Odd-parity effect and scale-dependent viscosity in atomic quantum gases
Journal article, 2025

Two-dimensional electron gases are predicted to possess an anomalous “tomographic” transport regime that is marked by an odd-even effect in the relaxation times, with odd-parity deformations of the Fermi surface becoming long-lived in comparison to even-parity ones. In this work, we establish that neutral two-component atomic Fermi gases also exhibit this tomographic effect. By diagonalizing the Fermi liquid collision integral, we identify odd-parity modes with anomalously long lifetimes below temperatures T≤0.15TF, which is within reach of cold atom experiments. Furthermore, in contrast to electron gases, we find that the odd-even effect in neutral gases is widely tuneable with interactions along the BCS-BEC crossover and is suppressed on the BEC side. We propose as an experimental signature of the odd-even effect the damping rate of quadrupole oscillations, which is anomalously enhanced due to the presence of long-lived odd-parity modes. Our findings suggest that the dynamics of two-dimensional Fermi gases is richer than previously thought and should include additional long-lived modes.

Author

Jeff Maki

University of Trento

University of Konstanz

Ulf Gran

Subatomic, High Energy and Plasma Physics

Johannes Hofmann

University of Gothenburg

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Communications Physics

23993650 (eISSN)

Vol. 8 1 319

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Atom and Molecular Physics and Optics

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1038/s42005-025-02231-w

More information

Latest update

8/15/2025