204 research outputs found
Entanglement and magnetic order
In recent years quantum statistical mechanics have benefited of cultural
interchanges with quantum information science. There is a bulk of evidence that
quantifying the entanglement allows a fine analysis of many relevant properties
of many-body quantum systems. Here we review the relation between entanglement
and the various type of magnetic order occurring in interacting spin systems.Comment: 29 pages, 10 eps figures. Review article for the special issue
"Entanglement entropy in extended systems" in J. Phys. A, edited by P.
Calabrese, J. Cardy and B. Doyo
Algebraic equivalence between certain models for superfluid--insulator transition
Algebraic contraction is proposed to realize mappings between models
Hamiltonians. This transformation contracts the algebra of the degrees of
freedom underlying the Hamiltonian. The rigorous mapping between the
anisotropic Heisenberg model, the Quantum Phase Model, and the Bose
Hubbard Model is established as the contractions of the algebra
underlying the dynamics of the Heisenberg model.Comment: 5 pages, revte
Quantum discord in a spin system with symmetry breaking
We analyze the quantum discord Q throughout the low-temperature phase diagram
of the quantum XY model in transverse field. We first focus on the T=0
order-disorder quantum phase transition both in the symmetric ground state and
in the symmetry broken one. Besides it, we highlight how Q displays clear
anomalies also at a non critical value of the control parameter inside the
ordered phase, where the ground state is completely factorized. We evidence how
the phenomenon is in fact of collective nature and displays universal features.
We also study Q at finite temperature. We show that, close to the quantum phase
transition, Q exhibits quantum-classical crossover of the system with universal
scaling behavior. We evidence a non trivial pattern of thermal correlations
resulting from the factorization phenomenon.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure, Contribution to the Festschrift volume in honour
of Vladimir Korepi
Local reversibility and entanglement structure of many-body ground states
The low-temperature physics of quantum many-body systems is largely governed
by the structure of their ground states. Minimizing the energy of local
interactions, ground states often reflect strong properties of locality such as
the area law for entanglement entropy and the exponential decay of correlations
between spatially separated observables. In this letter we present a novel
characterization of locality in quantum states, which we call `local
reversibility'. It characterizes the type of operations that are needed to
reverse the action of a general disturbance on the state. We prove that unique
ground states of gapped local Hamiltonian are locally reversible. This way, we
identify new fundamental features of many-body ground states, which cannot be
derived from the aforementioned properties. We use local reversibility to
distinguish between states enjoying microscopic and macroscopic quantum
phenomena. To demonstrate the potential of our approach, we prove specific
properties of ground states, which are relevant both to critical and
non-critical theories.Comment: 12 revtex pages, 2 pdf figs; minor changes, typos corrected. To be
published in Quantum Science and Technolog
Exact results for persistent currents of two bosons in a ring lattice
We study the ground state of two interacting bosonic particles confined in a
ring-shaped lattice potential and subjected to a synthetic magnetic flux. The
system is described by the Bose-Hubbard model and solved exactly through a
plane-wave Ansatz of the wave function. We obtain energies and correlation
functions of the system both for repulsive and attractive interactions. In
contrast with the one-dimensional continuous theory described by the
Lieb-Liniger model, in the lattice case we prove that the center of mass of the
two particles is coupled with its relative coordinate. Distinctive features
clearly emerge in the persistent current of the system. While for repulsive
bosons the persistent current displays a periodicity given by the standard flux
quantum for any interaction strength, in the attractive case the flux quantum
becomes fractionalized in a manner that depends on the interaction. We also
study the density after the long time expansion of the system which provides an
experimentally accessible route to detect persistent currents in cold atom
settings. Our results can be used to benchmark approximate schemes for the
many-body problem
Theoretical Description of Micromaser in the Ultrastrong-Coupling Regime
We theoretically investigate an ultrastrongly-coupled micromaser based on
Rydberg atoms interacting with a superconducting LC resonator, where the common
rotating-wave approximation and slowly-varying-envelope approximation are no
longer applicable. The effect of counter-rotating terms on the masing dynamics
is studied in detail. We find that the intraresonator electric energy declines
and the microwave oscillation frequency shifts significantly in the regime of
ultrastrong coupling. Additionally, the micromaser phase fluctuation is
suppressed, resulting in a reduced spectral linewidth.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Scaling of geometric phase versus band structure in cluster-Ising models
We study the phase diagram of a class of models in which a generalized
cluster interaction can be quenched by Ising exchange interaction and external
magnetic field. We characterize the various phases through winding numbers.
They may be ordinary phases with local order parameter or exotic ones, known as
symmetry protected topologically ordered phases. Quantum phase transitions with
dynamical critical exponents z = 1 or z = 2 are found. Quantum phase
transitions are analyzed through finite-size scaling of the geometric phase
accumulated when the spins of the lattice perform an adiabatic precession. In
particular, we quantify the scaling behavior of the geometric phase in relation
with the topology and low energy properties of the band structure of the
system
Topological pumping in Aharonov-Bohm rings
Topological Thouless pumping and Aharonov-Bohm effect are both fundamental
effects enabled by the topological properties of the system. Here, we study
both effects together: topological pumping of interacting particles through
Aharonov-Bohm rings. This system can prepare highly entangled many-particle
states, transport them via topological pumping and interfere them, revealing a
fractional flux quantum. The type of the generated state is revealed by
non-trivial Aharonov-Bohm interference patterns that could be used for quantum
sensing. The reflections induced by the interference result from transitions
between topological bands. Specific bands allow transport with a band gap
scaling as the square-root of the particle number. Our system paves a new way
for a combined system of state preparation and topological protected transport.Comment: to be published in Communications Physic
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