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We study near-equilibrium thermodynamics of bosonic atoms in a two-dimensional optical lattice by ramping up the lattice depth to convert a superfluid into an inhomogeneous mixture of superfluid and Mott insulator. Detailed study of in situ density profiles shows that, first, locally adiabatic ramps do not guarantee global thermal equilibrium. Indeed, full thermalization for typical parameters only occurs for experiment times which exceed one second. Secondly, ramping non-adiabatically to the Mott insulator regime can result in strong localized cooling at short times and global cooling once equilibrated. For an initial temperature estimated as 20 nK, we observe local temperatures as low as 1.5 nK, and a final global temperature of 9 nK. Possible cooling mechanisms include adiabatic decompression, modification of the density of states near the quantum critical regime, and the Joule-Thomson effect. **NOTE: Following submission of arXiv:0910.1382v1, a systematic correction was discovered in the density measurement, stemming from three-body losses during the imaging process. New measurements were performed, and the result is in support of the claim on the slow global dynamics. Due to the substantially altered methods and analysis, a new text has been posted as arXiv:1003.0855.
We study transport dynamics of ultracold cesium atoms in a two-dimensional optical lattice across the superfluid-Mott insulator transition based on in situ imaging. Inducing the phase transition with a lattice ramping routine expected to be locally a
We study the thermodynamics near the generic (density-driven) superfluid--Mott-insulator transition in the three-dimensional Bose-Hubbard model using the nonperturbative renormalization-group approach. At low energy the physics is controlled by the G
Studying the collective pairing phenomena in a two-component Fermi gas, we predict the appearance near the transition temperature $T_c$ of a well-resolved collective mode of quadratic dispersion. The mode is visible both above and below $T_c$ in the
We review the status of cooling techniques aimed at achieving the deepest quantum degeneracy for atomic Fermi gases. We first discuss some physical motivations, providing a quantitative assessment of the need for deep quantum degeneracy in relevant p
Cold atomic gases have proven capable of emulating a number of fundamental condensed matter phenomena including Bose-Einstein condensation, the Mott transition, Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov pairing and the quantum Hall effect. Cooling to a low en