324 research outputs found

    Dynamics of entanglement in a two-dimensional spin system

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    We consider the time evolution of entanglement in a finite two dimensional transverse Ising model. The model consists of a set of 7 localized spin-1/2 particles in a two dimensional triangular lattice coupled through nearest neighbor exchange interaction in presence of an external time dependent magnetic field. The magnetic field is applied in different function forms: step, exponential, hyperbolic and periodic. We found that the time evolution of the entanglement shows an ergodic behavior under the effect of the time dependent magnetic fields. Also we found that while the step magnetic field causes great disturbance to the system creating rabid oscillations, the system shows great controllability under the effect of the other magnetic fields where the entanglement profile follows closely the shape of the applied field even with the same frequency for periodic fields. This follow up trend breaks down as the strength of the field, the transition constant for exponential and hyperbolic, or frequency for periodic field increase leading to rapid oscillations. We observed that the entanglement is very sensitive to the initial value of the applied periodic field, the smaller the initial value the less distorted is the entanglement profile. Furthermore, the effect of thermal fluctuations is very devastating to the entanglement which decays very rapidly as the temperature increases. Interestingly, although large value of the magnetic field strength may yield small entanglement, it was found to be more persistent against thermal fluctuations than the small field strengths

    Coupled plasmon - phonon excitations in extrinsic monolayer graphene

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    The existence of an acoustic plasmon in extrinsic (doped or gated) monolayer graphene was found recently in an {\it ab initio} calculation with the frozen lattice [M. Pisarra {\it et al.}, arXiv:1306.6273, 2013]. By the {\em fully dynamic} density-functional perturbation theory approach, we demonstrate a strong coupling of the acoustic plasmonic mode to lattice vibrations. Thereby, the acoustic plasmon in graphene does not exist as an isolated excitation, but it is rather bound into a combined plasmon-phonon mode. We show that the coupling provides a mechanism for the {\em bidirectional} energy exchange between the electronic and the ionic subsystems with fundamentally, as well as practically, important implications for the lattice cooling and heating by electrons in graphene.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Scaling of entanglement at quantum phase transition for two-dimensional array of quantum dots

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    With Hubbard model, the entanglement scaling behavior in a two-dimensional itinerant system is investigated. It has been found that, on the two sides of the critical point denoting an inherent quantum phase transition (QPT), the entanglement follows different scalings with the size just as an order parameter does. This fact reveals the subtle role played by the entanglement in QPT as a fungible physical resource
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