In the standard quasiparticle picture, a lone electron or atom immersed in a sea of fermions interacts with its neighbors as it travels through the medium. The impurity drags surrounding particles along and forms a composite object known as a Fermi polaron, a quasiparticle that behaves like a single entity even though it arises from the coordinated motion of many particles. This quasiparticle concept underpins the understanding of strongly interacting systems ranging from ultracold atomic gases to solid state and nuclear matter, according to Heidelberg doctoral researcher Eugen Dizer.
The opposite extreme is captured by a phenomenon called Andersons orthogonality catastrophe, which describes what happens when an impurity becomes extremely heavy and effectively immobile. In that case the presence of the impurity reshapes the wave functions of the surrounding fermions so strongly that the original many body state is lost. The particles form a complex, highly correlated background that no longer supports coordinated motion, preventing the emergence of quasiparticles.
Using a combination of analytical approaches, the Heidelberg team has now built a common theory that links the mobile quasiparticle regime and the static impurity regime in a single description. For decades, researchers lacked a framework that could smoothly connect these two pictures of quantum impurities, even though both arise in closely related physical systems. The new work fills that gap and clarifies how the different behaviors emerge from a unified underlying mechanism.
The key insight is that even extremely heavy impurities are not perfectly fixed but still undergo slight motion as their environment responds and rearranges. According to the team, this residual motion opens an energy gap in the many body spectrum. That gap allows quasiparticles to form out of the strongly correlated background even when the impurity mass is very large.
Lead theorist Eugen Dizer, a member of the Quantum Matter Theory group headed by Prof Richard Schmidt at Heidelberg, explains that the framework shows how quasiparticles can emerge in systems with an almost static impurity. The mechanism naturally accounts for the continuous transition between polaronic states, where the impurity is dressed by excitations of the Fermi sea, and molecular quantum states in which the impurity binds more strongly to one or more particles in the medium.
Prof Schmidt notes that the resulting description of quantum impurities is powerful because it can be generalized to different spatial dimensions and interaction types. The formalism is not tied to a single platform and can be adapted to a variety of fermionic environments that host impurities with different masses and coupling strengths.
According to the Heidelberg researchers, the theory is directly relevant to current experiments on ultracold atomic gases, where impurities can be engineered and tuned with high precision. It also has implications for two dimensional materials and new classes of semiconductors in which localized charges or excitations act as impurities interacting with a sea of charge carriers. The ability to follow the evolution from mobile to nearly static impurities may help interpret measurements that probe how excitations propagate in these materials.
The study was carried out within the STRUCTURES Cluster of Excellence at Heidelberg University and the Collaborative Research Centre ISOQUANT 1225, which focus on fundamental aspects of quantum many body physics. The researchers report their results in the journal Physical Review Letters.
Research Report:Mass-Gap Description of Heavy Impurities in Fermi Gases
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