550 research outputs found
Probing the anomalous dynamical phase in long-range quantum spin chains through Fisher-zero lines
Using the framework of infinite Matrix Product States, the existence of an
\textit{anomalous} dynamical phase for the transverse-field Ising chain with
sufficiently long-range interactions was first reported in [J.~C.~Halimeh and
V.~Zauner-Stauber, arXiv:1610:02019], where it was shown that
\textit{anomalous} cusps arise in the Loschmidt-echo return rate for
sufficiently small quenches within the ferromagnetic phase. In this work we
further probe the nature of the anomalous phase through calculating the
corresponding Fisher-zero lines in the complex time plane. We find that these
Fisher-zero lines exhibit a qualitative difference in their behavior, where,
unlike in the case of the regular phase, some of them terminate before
intersecting the imaginary axis, indicating the existence of smooth peaks in
the return rate preceding the cusps. Additionally, we discuss in detail the
infinite Matrix Product State time-evolution method used to calculate Fisher
zeros and the Loschmidt-echo return rate using the Matrix Product State
transfer matrix. Our work sheds further light on the nature of the anomalous
phase in the long-range transverse-field Ising chain, while the numerical
treatment presented can be applied to more general quantum spin chains.Comment: Journal article. 9 pages and 6 figures. Includes in part what used to
be supplemental material in arXiv:1610:0201
Quasiparticle origin of dynamical quantum phase transitions
Considering nonintegrable quantum Ising chains with exponentially decaying
interactions, we present matrix product state results that establish a
connection between low-energy quasiparticle excitations and the kind of
nonanalyticities in the Loschmidt return rate. When domain walls in the
spectrum of the quench Hamiltonian are energetically favored to be bound rather
than freely propagating, anomalous cusps appear in the return rate regardless
of the initial state. In the nearest-neighbor limit, domain walls are always
freely propagating, and anomalous cusps never appear. As a consequence, our
work illustrates that models in the same equilibrium universality class can
still exhibit fundamentally distinct out-of-equilibrium criticality. Our
results are accessible to current ultracold-atom and ion-trap experiments.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted versio
Semibiotic Persistence
From observation, we find four different strategies to successfully enable structures to persist over extended periods of time. If functionally relevant features are very large compared to the changes that can be effectuated by entropy, the functional structure itself has a high enough probability to erode only slowly over time. If the functionally relevant features are protected from environmental influence by sacrificial layers that absorb the impinging of the environment,deterioration can be avoided or slowed. Loss of functionality can be delayed, even for complex systems, by keeping alternate options for all required components available. Biological systems also apply information processing to actively counter the impact of entropy. The latter strategy increases the overall persistence of living systems and enables them to maintain a highly complex functional organisation during their lifetime and over generations. In contrast to the other strategies, information processing has only low material overhead. While at present engineered technology is far from achieving the self-repair of evolved systems, the semibiotic combination of biological components with conventionally engineered systems may open a path to long-term persistence of functional devices in harsh environments. We review nature’s strategies for persistence, and consider early steps taken in the laboratory to import such capabilities into engineered architectures.<br/
Provenance-based validation of E-science experiments
E-Science experiments typically involve many distributed services maintained by different organisations. After an experiment has been executed, it is useful for a scientist to verify that the execution was performed correctly or is compatible with some existing experimental criteria or standards. Scientists may also want to review and verify experiments performed by their colleagues. There are no existing frameworks for validating such experiments in today's e-Science systems. Users therefore have to rely on error checking performed by the services, or adopt other ad hoc methods. This paper introduces a platform-independent framework for validating workflow executions. The validation relies on reasoning over the documented provenance of experiment results and semantic descriptions of services advertised in a registry. This validation process ensures experiments are performed correctly, and thus results generated are meaningful. The framework is tested in a bioinformatics application that performs protein compressibility analysis
Prethermalization and Persistent Order in the Absence of a Thermal Phase Transition
We numerically study the dynamics after a parameter quench in the
one-dimensional transverse-field Ising model with long-range interactions
( with distance ), for finite chains and also directly
in the thermodynamic limit. In nonequilibrium, i.e., before the system settles
into a thermal state, we find a long-lived regime that is characterized by a
prethermal value of the magnetization, which in general differs from its
thermal value. We find that the ferromagnetic phase is stabilized dynamically:
as a function of the quench parameter, the prethermal magnetization shows a
transition between a symmetry-broken and a symmetric phase, even for those
values of for which no finite-temperature transition occurs in
equilibrium. The dynamical critical point is shifted with respect to the
equilibrium one, and the shift is found to depend on as well as on the
quench parameters.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Optimal signal states for quantum detectors
Quantum detectors provide information about quantum systems by establishing
correlations between certain properties of those systems and a set of
macroscopically distinct states of the corresponding measurement devices. A
natural question of fundamental significance is how much information a quantum
detector can extract from the quantum system it is applied to. In the present
paper we address this question within a precise framework: given a quantum
detector implementing a specific generalized quantum measurement, what is the
optimal performance achievable with it for a concrete information readout task,
and what is the optimal way to encode information in the quantum system in
order to achieve this performance? We consider some of the most common
information transmission tasks - the Bayes cost problem (of which minimal error
discrimination is a special case), unambiguous message discrimination, and the
maximal mutual information. We provide general solutions to the Bayesian and
unambiguous discrimination problems. We also show that the maximal mutual
information has an interpretation of a capacity of the measurement, and derive
various properties that it satisfies, including its relation to the accessible
information of an ensemble of states, and its form in the case of a
group-covariant measurement. We illustrate our results with the example of a
noisy two-level symmetric informationally complete measurement, for whose
capacity we give analytical proofs of optimality. The framework presented here
provides a natural way to characterize generalized quantum measurements in
terms of their information readout capabilities.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure, example section extende
From SICs and MUBs to Eddington
This is a survey of some very old knowledge about Mutually Unbiased Bases
(MUB) and Symmetric Informationally Complete POVMs (SIC). In prime dimensions
the former are closely tied to an elliptic normal curve symmetric under the
Heisenberg group, while the latter are believed to be orbits under the
Heisenberg group in all dimensions. In dimensions 3 and 4 the SICs are
understandable in terms of elliptic curves, but a general statement escapes us.
The geometry of the SICs in 3 and 4 dimensions is discussed in some detail.Comment: 12 pages; from the Festschrift for Tony Sudber
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