15,110 research outputs found
Dynamics of the entanglement spectrum in spin chains
We study the dynamics of the entanglement spectrum, that is the time
evolution of the eigenvalues of the reduced density matrices after a
bipartition of a one-dimensional spin chain. Starting from the ground state of
an initial Hamiltonian, the state of the system is evolved in time with a new
Hamiltonian. We consider both instantaneous and quasi adiabatic quenches of the
system Hamiltonian across a quantum phase transition. We analyse the Ising
model that can be exactly solved and the XXZ for which we employ the
time-dependent density matrix renormalisation group algorithm. Our results show
once more a connection between the Schmidt gap, i.e. the difference of the two
largest eigenvalues of the reduced density matrix and order parameters, in this
case the spontaneous magnetisation.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, comments are welcome! Version published in JSTAT
special issue on "Quantum Entanglement In Condensed Matter Physics
Entanglement enhanced information transmission over a quantum channel with correlated noise
We show that entanglement is a useful resource to enhance the mutual
information of the depolarizing channel when the noise on consecutive uses of
the channel has some partial correlations. We obtain a threshold in the degree
of memory, depending on the shrinking factor of the channel, above which a
higher amount of classical information is transmitted with entangled signals
Constraints on Light WIMP candidates from the Isotropic Diffuse Gamma-Ray Emission
Motivated by the measurements reported by direct detection experiments, most
notably DAMA, CDMS-II, CoGeNT and Xenon10/100, we study further the constraints
that might be set on some light dark matter candidates, M_DM ~ few GeV, using
the Fermi-LAT data on the isotropic gamma-ray diffuse emission. In particular,
we consider a Dirac fermion singlet interacting through a new Z' gauge boson,
and a scalar singlet S interacting through the Higgs portal. Both candidates
are WIMP (Weakly Interacting Massive Particles), i.e. they have an annihilation
cross-section in the pbarn range. Also they may both have a spin-independent
elastic cross section on nucleons in the range required by direct detection
experiments. Although being generic WIMP candidates, because they have
different interactions with Standard Model particles, their phenomenology
regarding the isotropic diffuse gamma-ray emission is quite distinct. In the
case of the scalar singlet, the one-to-one correspondence between its
annihilation cross-section and its spin-independent elastic scattering
cross-section permits to express the constraints from the Fermi-LAT data in the
direct detection exclusion plot, sigma_n^0--M_DM. Depending on the
astrophysics, we argue that it is possible to exclude the singlet scalar dark
matter candidate at 95 % CL. The constraints on the Dirac singlet interacting
through a Z' are comparatively weaker.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures, replaced to match with the published versio
Dark Breathers in Granular Crystals
We present a study of the existence, stability and bifurcation structure of
families of dark breathers in a one-dimensional uniform chain of spherical
beads under static load. A defocus- ing nonlinear Schrodinger equation (NLS) is
derived for frequencies that are close to the edge of the phonon band and is
used to construct targeted initial conditions for numerical computations.
Salient features of the system include the existence of large amplitude
solutions that bifurcate with the small amplitude solutions described by the
NLS equation, and the presence of a nonlinear instability that, to the best of
the authors knowledge, has not been observed in classical Fermi- Pasta-Ulam
lattices. Finally, it is also demonstrated that these dark breathers can be
detected in a physically realistic way by merely actuating the ends of an
initially at rest chain of beads and inducing destructive interference between
their signals
Entanglement control in hybrid optomechanical systems
We demonstrate the control of entanglement in a hybrid optomechanical system
comprising an optical cavity with a mechanical end-mirror and an intracavity
Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC). Pulsed laser light (tuned within realistic
experimental conditions) is shown to induce an almost sixfold increase of the
atom-mirror entanglement and to be responsible for interesting dynamics between
such mesoscopic systems. In order to assess the advantages offered by the
proposed control technique, we compare the time-dependent dynamics of the
system under constant pumping with the evolution due to the modulated laser
light.Comment: Published versio
Probing magnetic order in ultracold lattice gases
A forthcoming challenge in ultracold lattice gases is the simulation of
quantum magnetism. That involves both the preparation of the lattice atomic gas
in the desired spin state and the probing of the state. Here we demonstrate how
a probing scheme based on atom-light interfaces gives access to the order
parameters of nontrivial quantum magnetic phases, allowing us to characterize
univocally strongly correlated magnetic systems produced in ultracold gases.
This method, which is also nondemolishing, yields spatially resolved spin
correlations and can be applied to bosons or fermions. As a proof of principle,
we apply this method to detect the complete phase diagram displayed by a chain
of (rotationally invariant) spin-1 bosons.Comment: published versio
Increasing entanglement through engineered disorder in the random Ising chain
The ground state entanglement entropy between block of sites in the random
Ising chain is studied by means of the Von Neumann entropy. We show that in
presence of strong correlations between the disordered couplings and local
magnetic fields the entanglement increases and becomes larger than in the
ordered case. The different behavior with respect to the uncorrelated
disordered model is due to the drastic change of the ground state properties.
The same result holds also for the random 3-state quantum Potts model.Comment: 4 pages, published version, a few typos correcte
Measuring work and heat in ultracold quantum gases
We propose a feasible experimental scheme to direct measure heat and work in
cold atomic setups. The method is based on a recent proposal which shows that
work is a positive operator valued measure (POVM). In the present contribution,
we demonstrate that the interaction between the atoms and the light
polarisation of a probe laser allows us to implement such POVM. In this way the
work done on or extracted from the atoms after a given process is encoded in
the light quadrature that can be measured with a standard homodyne detection.
The protocol allows one to verify fluctuation theorems and study properties of
the non-unitary dynamics of a given thermodynamic process.Comment: Published version in the Focus Issue on "Quantum Thermodynamics
Entanglement scaling at first order phase transitions
First order quantum phase transitions (1QPTs) are signaled, in the
thermodynamic limit, by discontinuous changes in the ground state properties.
These discontinuities affect expectation values of observables, including
spatial correlations. When a 1QPT is crossed in the vicinity of a second order
one (2QPT), due to the correlation length divergence of the latter, the
corresponding ground state is modified and it becomes increasingly difficult to
determine the order of the transition when the size of the system is finite.
Here we show that, in such situations, it is possible to apply finite size
scaling to entanglement measures, as it has recently been done for the order
parameters and the energy gap, in order to recover the correct thermodynamic
limit. Such a finite size scaling can unambigously discriminate between first
and second order phase transitions in the vicinity of multricritical points
even when the singularities displayed by entanglement measures lead to
controversial results
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