653 research outputs found
Density ordering instabilities of quasi-two-dimensional fermionic polar molecules in single-layer and multi-layer configurations: exact treatment of exchange interactions
We study the in-plane and out-of-plane density ordering instabilities of
quasi-two-dimensional fermionic polar molecules in single-layer and multi-layer
configurations. We locate the soft modes by evaluating linear response
functions within the conserving time-dependent Hartree-Fock (TDHF). The
short-range exchange effects are taken into account by solving the
Bethe-Salpeter integral equation numerically. An instability phase diagram is
calculated for both single-layer and multi-layer systems and the unstable
wave-vector is indicated. In all cases, the in-plane density wave instability
is found to precede the out-of-plane instability. The unstable wave-vector is
found to be approximately twice the Fermi wave-vector of one of the subbands at
a time and can change discontinuously as a function of density and dipolar
interaction strength. In multi-layer configurations, we find a large
enhancement of density wave instability driven by dilute quasiparticles in the
first excited subband. Finally, we provide a simple qualitative description of
the phase diagrams using a RPA-like approach. Compared to previous works done
within the RPA approximation, we find that inclusion of exchange interactions
stabilize the normal liquid phase further and increase the critical dipolar
interaction strength corresponding to the onset of density-wave instability by
over a factor of two.Comment: 20 pages, 16 figure
Measuring entanglement entropy of a generic many-body system with a quantum switch
Entanglement entropy has become an important theoretical concept in condensed
matter physics, because it provides a unique tool for characterizing quantum
mechanical many-body phases and new kinds of quantum order. However, the
experimental measurement of entanglement entropy in a many-body systems is
widely believed to be unfeasible, owing to the nonlocal character of this
quantity. Here, we propose a general method to measure the entanglement
entropy. The method is based on a quantum switch (a two-level system) coupled
to a composite system consisting of several copies of the original many-body
system. The state of the switch controls how different parts of the composite
system connect to each other. We show that, by studying the dynamics of the
quantum switch only, the Renyi entanglement entropy of the many-body system can
be extracted. We propose a possible design of the quantum switch, which can be
realized in cold atomic systems. Our work provides a route towards testing the
scaling of entanglement in critical systems, as well as a method for a direct
experimental detection of topological order.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Regimes of heating and dynamical response in driven many-body localized systems
We explore the response of many-body localized (MBL) systems to periodic
driving of arbitrary amplitude, focusing on the rate at which they exchange
energy with the drive. To this end, we introduce an infinite-temperature
generalization of the effective "heating rate" in terms of the spread of a
random walk in energy space. We compute this heating rate numerically and
estimate it analytically in various regimes. When the drive amplitude is much
smaller than the frequency, this effective heating rate is given by linear
response theory with a coefficient that is proportional to the optical
conductivity; in the opposite limit, the response is nonlinear and the heating
rate is a nontrivial power-law of time. We discuss the mechanisms underlying
this crossover in the MBL phase, and comment on its implications for the
subdiffusive thermal phase near the MBL transition.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figure
Superconductor-to-normal transition in finite nanowires
In this paper we discuss the interplay of quantum fluctuations and
dissipation in uniform superconducting nanowires. We consider a
phenomenological model with superconducting and normal components, and a finite
equilibration rate between these two-fluids. We find that phase-slip dipoles
proliferate in the wire, and decouple the two-fluids within its bulk. This
implies that the the normal fluid only couples to the superconductor fluid
through the leads at the edges of the wire, and the {\it local} dissipation is
unimportant. Therefore, while long wires have a superconductor-metal transition
tuned by local properties of the superconducting fluid, short wires have a
transition when the {\it total} resistance is .Comment: 4+ page
Far-from-equilibrium field theory of many-body quantum spin systems: Prethermalization and relaxation of spin spiral states in three dimensions
We study theoretically the far-from-equilibrium relaxation dynamics of spin
spiral states in the three dimensional isotropic Heisenberg model. The
investigated problem serves as an archetype for understanding quantum dynamics
of isolated many-body systems in the vicinity of a spontaneously broken
continuous symmetry. We present a field-theoretical formalism that
systematically improves on mean-field for describing the real-time quantum
dynamics of generic spin-1/2 systems. This is achieved by mapping spins to
Majorana fermions followed by a 1/N expansion of the resulting two-particle
irreducible (2PI) effective action. Our analysis reveals rich
fluctuation-induced relaxation dynamics in the unitary evolution of spin spiral
states. In particular, we find the sudden appearance of long-lived
prethermalized plateaus with diverging lifetimes as the spiral winding is tuned
toward the thermodynamically stable ferro- or antiferromagnetic phases. The
emerging prethermalized states are characterized by different bosonic modes
being thermally populated at different effective temperatures, and by a
hierarchical relaxation process reminiscent of glassy systems. Spin-spin
correlators found by solving the non-equilibrium Bethe-Salpeter equation
provide further insight into the dynamic formation of correlations, the fate of
unstable collective modes, and the emergence of fluctuation-dissipation
relations. Our predictions can be verified experimentally using recent
realizations of spin spiral states with ultracold atoms in a quantum gas
microscope [S. Hild, et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 113, 147205 (2014)]
- …
