81 research outputs found

    Resonances in a periodically driven bosonic system

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    Periodically driven systems are a common topic in modern physics. In optical lattices specifically, driving is at the origin of many interesting phenomena. However, energy is not conserved in driven systems, and under periodic driving, heating of a system is a real concern. In an effort to better understand this phenomenon, the heating of single-band systems has been studied, with a focus on disorder- and interaction-induced effects, such as many-body localisation. Nevertheless, driven systems occur in a much wider context than this, leaving room for further research. Here, we fill this gap by studying a non-interacting model, characterised by discrete, periodically spaced energy levels that are unbounded from above. We couple these energy levels resonantly through a periodic drive, and discuss the heating dynamics of this system as a function of the driving protocol. In this way, we show that a combination of stimulated emission and absorption causes the presence of resonant stable states. This will serve to elucidate the conditions under which resonant driving causes heating in quantum systems

    Celebrating Haldane's `Luttinger liquid theory'

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    This short piece celebrates Haldane's seminal J. Phys. C 14, 2585 (1981) paper laying the foundations of the modern theory of Luttinger liquids in one-dimensional systems.Comment: Viewpoint for Journal of Physics: Condensed Matte

    Quantum Brownian motion in a Landau level

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    Motivated by questions about the open-system dynamics of topological quantum matter, we investigated the quantum Brownian motion of an electron in a homogeneous magnetic field. When the Fermi length lF=ℏ/(vFmeff)l_F=\hbar/(v_Fm_{\text{eff}}) becomes much longer than the magnetic length lB=(ℏc/eB)1/2l_B=(\hbar c/eB)^{1/2}, then the spatial coordinates X,YX,Y of the electron cease to commute, [X,Y]=ilB2[X,Y]=il_B^2. As a consequence, localization of the electron becomes limited by Heisenberg uncertainty, and the linear bath-electron coupling becomes unconventional. Moreover, because the kinetic energy of the electron is quenched by the strong magnetic field, the electron has no energy to give to or take from the bath, and so the usual connection between frictional forces and dissipation no longer holds. These two features make quantum Brownian motion topological, in the regime lF≫lBl_F\gg l_B, which is at the verge of current experimental capabilities. We model topological quantum Brownian motion in terms of an unconventional operator Langevin equation derived from first principles, and solve this equation with the aim of characterizing diffusion. While diffusion in the noncommutative plane turns out to be conventional, with the mean displacement squared being proportional to tαt^\alpha and α=1\alpha=1, there is an exotic regime for the proportionality constant in which it is directly proportional to the friction coefficient and inversely proportional to the square of the magnetic field: in this regime, friction helps diffusion and the magnetic field suppresses all fluctuations. We also show that quantum tunneling can be completely suppressed in the noncommutative plane for suitably designed metastable potential wells, a feature that might be worth exploiting for storage and protection of quantum information

    Thermodynamic signatures of edge states in topological insulators

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    Topological insulators are states of matter distinguished by the presence of symmetry protected metallic boundary states. These edge modes have been characterised in terms of transport and spectroscopic measurements, but a thermodynamic description has been lacking. The challenge arises because in conventional thermodynamics the potentials are required to scale linearly with extensive variables like volume, which does not allow for a general treatment of boundary effects. In this paper, we overcome this challenge with Hill thermodynamics. In this extension of the thermodynamic formalism, the grand potential is split into an extensive, conventional contribution, and the subdivision potential, which is the central construct of Hill's theory. For topologically non-trivial electronic matter, the subdivision potential captures measurable contributions to the density of states and the heat capacity: it is the thermodynamic manifestation of the topological edge structure. Furthermore, the subdivision potential reveals phase transitions of the edge even when they are not manifested in the bulk, thus opening a variety of new possibilities for investigating, manipulating, and characterizing topological quantum matter solely in terms of equilibrium boundary physics.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure

    Strongly interacting bosons in a 1D optical lattice at incommensurate densities

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    We investigate quantum phase transitions occurring in a system of strongly interacting ultracold bosons in a 1D optical lattice. After discussing the commensurate-incommensurate transition, we focus on the phases appearing at incommensurate filling. We find a rich phase diagram, with superfluid, supersolid and solid (kink-lattice) phases. Supersolids generally appear in theoretical studies of systems with long-range interactions; our results break this paradigm and show that they may also emerge in models including only short-range (contact) interactions, provided that quantum fluctuations are properly taken into account

    Bandwidth-resonant Floquet states in honeycomb optical lattices

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    We investigate, within Floquet theory, topological phases in the out-of-equilibrium system that consists of fermions in a circularly shaken honeycomb optical lattice. We concentrate on the intermediate regime, in which the shaking frequency is of the same order of magnitude as the band width, such that adjacent Floquet bands start to overlap, creating a hierarchy of band inversions. It is shown that two-phonon resonances provide a topological phase that can be described within the Bernevig-Hughes-Zhang model of HgTe quantum wells. This allows for an understanding of out-of-equilibrium topological phases in terms of simple band inversions, similar to equilibrium systems

    Topological origin of edge states in two-dimensional inversion-symmetric insulators and semimetals

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    Symmetries play an essential role in identifying and characterizing topological states of matter. Here, we classify topologically two-dimensional (2D) insulators and semimetals with vanishing spin-orbit coupling using time-reversal (T\mathcal{T}) and inversion (I\mathcal{I}) symmetry. This allows us to link the presence of edge states in I\mathcal{I} and T\mathcal{T} symmetric 2D insulators, which are topologically trivial according to the Altland-Zirnbauer table, to a Z2\mathbb{Z}_2 topological invariant. This invariant is directly related to the quantization of the Zak phase. It also predicts the generic presence of edge states in Dirac semimetals, in the absence of chiral symmetry. We then apply our findings to bilayer black phosphorus and show the occurrence of a gate-induced topological phase transition, where the Z2\mathbb{Z}_2 invariant changes

    Fractal Nodal Band Structures and Fermi Surfaces

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    Non-Hermitian systems exhibit very interesting band structures, comprising exceptional points at which eigenvalues and eigenvectors coalesce. Novel topological phenomena were shown to arise from the existence of those exceptional points, with applications in lasing and sensing. One important open question is how the topology of those exceptional points would manifest at non-integer dimension. Here, we report on the appearance of fractal eigenvalue degeneracies in Hermitian and non-Hermitian topological band structures. The existence of a fractal nodal Fermi surface might have profound implications on the physics of black holes and Fermi surface instability driven phenomena, such as superconductivity and charge density waves.Comment: 4+1 pages, 5+1 figure
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