394 research outputs found

    On non-coercive mixed problems for parameter-dependent elliptic operators

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    We consider a (generally, non-coercive) mixed boundary value problem in a bounded domain DD of Rn{\mathbb R}^n for a second order parameter-dependent elliptic differential operator A(x,,λ)A (x,\partial, \lambda) with complex-valued essentially bounded measured coefficients and complex parameter λ\lambda. The differential operator is assumed to be of divergent form in DD, the boundary operator B(x,)B (x,\partial) is of Robin type with possible pseudo-differential components on D\partial D. The boundary of DD is assumed to be a Lipschitz surface. Under these assumptions the pair (A(x,,λ),B)(A (x,\partial, \lambda),B) induces a holomorphic family of Fredholm operators L(λ):H+(D)H(D)L(\lambda): H^+(D) \to H^- (D) in suitable Hilbert spaces H+(D)H^+(D) , H(D)H^- (D) of Sobolev type. If the argument of the complex-valued multiplier of the parame\-ter in A(x,,λ)A (x,\partial, \lambda) is continuous and the coefficients related to second order derivatives of the operator are smooth then we prove that the operators L(λ)L(\lambda) are conti\-nu\-ously invertible for all λ\lambda with sufficiently large modulus λ|\lambda| on each ray on the complex plane C\mathbb C where the differential operator A(x,,λ)A (x,\partial, \lambda) is parameter-dependent elliptic. We also describe reasonable conditions for the system of root functions related to the family L(λ)L (\lambda) to be (doubly) complete in the spaces H+(D)H^+(D), H(D)H^- (D) and the Lebesgue space L2(D)L^2 (D)

    Unconventional fermionic pairing states in a monochromatically tilted optical lattice

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    We study the one-dimensional attractive fermionic Hubbard model under the influence of periodic driving with the time-dependent density matrix renormalization group method. We show that the system can be driven into an unconventional pairing state characterized by a condensate made of Cooper pairs with a finite center-of-mass momentum similar to a Fulde-Ferrell state. We obtain results both in the laboratory and the rotating reference frames demonstrating that the momentum of the condensate can be finely tuned by changing the ratio between the amplitude and the frequency of the driving. In particular, by quenching this ratio to the value corresponding to suppression of the tunneling and the Coulomb interaction strength to zero, we are able to “freeze” the condensate. We finally study the effects of different initial conditions and compare our numerical results to those obtained from a time-independent Floquet theory in the large frequency regime. Our work offers the possibility of engineering and controlling unconventional pairing states in fermionic condensates.This work was conducted at the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences, sponsored by the Scientific User Facilities Division (SUFD), Basic Energy Sciences (BES), U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), under contract with UT-Battelle. A.N. acknowledges support by the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences and by the Early Career Research program, SUFD, BES, DOE. A.E.F. acknowledges the DOE, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, for support under Grant No. DE-SC0014407. A.P. was supported by NSF DMR-1506340, ARO W911NF1410540, and AFOSR FA9550-16-1-0334. (Scientific User Facilities Division (SUFD); Basic Energy Sciences (BES); U.S. Department of Energy (DOE); UT-Battelle; Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences; Early Career Research program; SUFD; BES; DOE; DE-SC0014407 - DOE, Office of Basic Energy Sciences; NSF DMR-1506340; ARO W911NF1410540; AFOSR FA9550-16-1-0334)Published versio

    Breakdown of the adiabatic limit in low dimensional gapless systems

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    It is generally believed that a generic system can be reversibly transformed from one state into another by sufficiently slow change of parameters. A standard argument favoring this assertion is based on a possibility to expand the energy or the entropy of the system into the Taylor series in the ramp speed. Here we show that this argumentation is only valid in high enough dimensions and can break down in low-dimensional gapless systems. We identify three generic regimes of a system response to a slow ramp: (A) mean-field, (B) non-analytic, and (C) non-adiabatic. In the last regime the limits of the ramp speed going to zero and the system size going to infinity do not commute and the adiabatic process does not exist in the thermodynamic limit. We support our results by numerical simulations. Our findings can be relevant to condensed-matter, atomic physics, quantum computing, quantum optics, cosmology and others.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Nature Physics (originally submitted version

    Non-equilibrium coherence dynamics of a soft boson lattice

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    We study the non-equilibrium evolution of the phase coherence of a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) in a one dimensional optical lattice, as the lattice is suddenly quenched from an insulating to a superfluid state. We observe slowly damped phase coherence oscillations in the regime of large filling factor (~100 bosons per site) at a frequency proportional to the generalized Josephson frequency. The truncated Wigner approximation (TWA) predicts the frequency of the observed oscillations.Comment: 10 pages. 4 figure

    Dynamical Quantum Hall Effect in the Parameter Space

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    Geometric phases in quantum mechanics play an extraordinary role in broadening our understanding of fundamental significance of geometry in nature. One of the best known examples is the Berry phase (M.V. Berry (1984), Proc. Royal. Soc. London A, 392:45) which naturally emerges in quantum adiabatic evolution. So far the applicability and measurements of the Berry phase were mostly limited to systems of weakly interacting quasi-particles, where interference experiments are feasible. Here we show how one can go beyond this limitation and observe the Berry curvature and hence the Berry phase in generic systems as a non-adiabatic response of physical observables to the rate of change of an external parameter. These results can be interpreted as a dynamical quantum Hall effect in a parameter space. The conventional quantum Hall effect is a particular example of the general relation if one views the electric field as a rate of change of the vector potential. We illustrate our findings by analyzing the response of interacting spin chains to a rotating magnetic field. We observe the quantization of this response, which term the rotational quantum Hall effect.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures added figure with anisotropic chai

    Decay of super-currents in condensates in optical lattices

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    In this paper we discuss decay of superfluid currents in boson lattice systems due to quantum tunneling and thermal activation mechanisms. We derive asymptotic expressions for the decay rate near the critical current in two regimes, deep in the superfluid phase and close to the superfluid-Mott insulator transition. The broadening of the transition at the critical current due to these decay mechanisms is more pronounced at lower dimensions. We also find that the crossover temperature below which quantum decay dominates is experimentally accessible in most cases. Finally, we discuss the dynamics of the current decay and point out the difference between low and high currents.Comment: Contribution to the special issue of Journal of Superconductivity in honor of Michael Tinkham's 75th birthda

    Failure of Scattering Interference in the Pseudogap State of Cuprate Superconductors

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    We calculate scattering interference patterns for various electronic states proposed for the pseudogap regime of the cuprate superconductors. The scattering interference models all produce patterns whose wavelength changes as a function of energy, in contradiction to the energy-independent wavelength seen by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) experiments in the pseudogap state. This suggests that the patterns seen in STM local density of states measurements are not due to scattering interference, but are rather the result of some form of ordering.Comment: To be submitted to Phys. Rev.
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