Abstract
Intersite dipolar interactions induce, even in absence of disorder, an intriguing nonergodic dynamics for dipolar bosons in an optical lattice. We show that the inherent dipole-induced density-dependent tunneling, typically neglected, plays a crucial role in this dynamics. For shallow-enough lattices, the delocalization stemming from the interaction-induced hopping overcomes the localization induced by intersite interactions. As a result, in stark contrast to the more studied case of hard-core bosons, delocalization is counterintuitively strengthened when the dipolar strength increases. Furthermore, the quasicancellation between bare and interaction-induced tunneling may lead, near a lattice-depth-dependent value of the dipole strength, to an exact decoupling of the Hilbert space between ergodic hard-core states and strongly nonergodic soft-core ones. Our results show that interaction-induced hopping should play a crucial role in future experiments on the dynamics of polar lattice gases.
1 More- Received 13 October 2022
- Revised 12 March 2023
- Accepted 14 March 2023
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.107.104305
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