Three fermions with strongly repulsive interactions in a spherical harmonic trap constitute the simplest nontrivial system that can exhibit the onset of itinerant ferromagnetism. Here, we present exact solutions for three trapped, attractively interacting fermions near a Feshbach resonance. We analyze energy levels on the upper branch of the resonance where the atomic interaction is effectively repulsive. When the s-wave scattering length a is sufficiently positive, three fully polarized fermions are energetically stable against a single spin-flip, indicating the possibility of itinerant ferromagnetism, as inferred in the recent experiment. We also investigate the high-temperature thermodynamics of a strongly repulsive or attractive Fermi gas using a quantum virial expansion. The second and third virial coefficients are calculated. The resulting equations of state can be tested in future quantitative experimental measurements at high temperatures and can provide a useful benchmark for quantum Monte Carlo simulations.
Funding
ARC | DP0984522
ARC | DP0984637
Two-component ultracold fermions and molecular systems from BCS to BEC transit and cross-theoretical description of the physical characteristics of the region : National Natural Science Foundation of China | 10774190
Ultracold atomic Fermi gases in the strongly interacting regime: A new frontier of quantum many-body physics : Australian Research Council | DP0984522
Imbalanced superfluidity: The quantum mystery that defies solution : Australian Research Council (ARC) | DP0984637
This article was highlighted by the American Physical Society's series 'Physics: spotlighting exceptional research'. See: http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/Physics.3.74.