For strong interactions, we find evidence for an emergent incompressible Mott insulating phase.
Transport properties are among the defining characteristics of many important phases in condensed matter physics. In the presence of strong correlations they are difficult to predict even for model systems like the Hubbard model. In real materials they are in general obscured by additional complications including impurities, lattice defects or multi-band effects. Ultracold atoms in contrast offer the possibility to study transport and out-of-equilibrium phenomena in a clean and well-controlled environment and can therefore act as a quantum simulator for condensed matter systems. Here we studied the expansion of an initially confined fermionic quantum gas in the lowest band of a homogeneous optical lattice. While we observe ballistic transport for non-interacting atoms, even small interactions render the expansion almost bimodal with a dramatically reduced expansion velocity. The dynamics is independent of the sign of the interaction, revealing a novel, dynamic symmetry of the Hubbard model.In solid state physics, transport properties are among the key observables, the most prominent example being the electrical conductivity, which e.g. allows to distinguish normal conductors from insulators or superconductors. Furthermore, many of today's most intriguing solid state phenomena manifest themselves in transport properties, examples including high-temperature superconductivity, giant magnetoresistance, quantum hall physics, topological insulators and disorder phenomena. Especially in strongly correlated systems, where the interactions between the conductance electrons are important, transport properties are difficult to calculate beyond the linear response regime. In general, predicting out-of-equilibrium fermionic dynamics represents an even harder problem than the prediction of static properties like the nature of the ground state. In real solids further complications arise due to the effects of e.g. impurities, lattice defects and phonons. These complications render an experimental investigation in a clean and well controlled ultracold atom system highly desirable. While the last years have seen dramatic progress in the control of quantum gases in optical lattices [1-3], a thorough understanding of the dynamics in these systems is still lacking. Genuine dynamical experiments can not only uncover new dynamic phenomena but are also essential to gain insight into the timescales needed to achieve equilibrium in the lattice [4,5] or to adiabatically load into the lattice [6,7].Using both bosonic and fermionic [8-10] atoms, it has become possible to simulate models of strongly interacting quantum particles, for which the Hubbard model [11] * ulrich.schneider@lmu.de is probably the most important example. A major advantage of these systems compared to real solids is the possibility to change all relevant parameters in real-time by e.g. varying laser intensities or magnetic fields. While first studies of dynamical properties of both bosonic and fermionic quantum gases [12][13][14] have already been performed, a remaining...
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