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We propose an experimental protocol to study $p$-wave superfluidity in a spin-polarized cold Fermi gas tuned by an $s$-wave Feshbach resonance. A crucial ingredient is to add a quasi-1D optical lattice and tune the fillings of two spins to the $s$ an d $p$ band, respectively. The pairing order parameter is confirmed to inherit $p$-wave symmetry in its center-of-mass motion. We find that it can further develop into a state of unexpected $pi$-phase modulation in a broad parameter regime. Measurable quantities are calculated, including time-of-flight distributions, radio-frequency spectra, and in situ phase-contrast imaging in an external trap. The $pi$-phase $p$-wave superfluid is reminiscent of the $pi$-state in superconductor-ferromagnet heterostructures but differs in symmetry and origin. If observed, it would represent another example of $p$-wave pairing, first discovered in He-3 liquids.
Under certain circumstances, three or more interacting particles may form bound states. While the general few-body problem is not analytically solvable, the so-called Efimov trimers appear for a system of three particles with resonant two-body intera ctions. The binding energies of these trimers are predicted to be universally connected to each other, independent of the microscopic details of the interaction. By exploiting a Feshbach resonance to widely tune the interactions between trapped ultracold lithium atoms, we find evidence for two universally connected Efimov trimers and their associated four-body bound states. A total of eleven precisely determined three- and four-body features are found in the inelastic loss spectrum. Their relative locations on either side of the resonance agree well with universal theory, while a systematic deviation from universality is found when comparing features across the resonance.
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