183 research outputs found
A Bionic Coulomb Phase on the Pyrochlore Lattice
A class of three dimensional classical lattice systems with macroscopic
ground state degeneracies, most famously the spin ice system, are known to
exhibit "Coulomb" phases wherein long wavelength correlations within the ground
state manifold are described by an emergent Maxwell electrodynamics. We discuss
a new example of this phenomenon-the four state Potts model on the pyrochlore
lattice-where the long wavelength description now involves three independent
gauge fields as we confirm via simulation. The excitations above the ground
state manifold are bions, defects that are simultaneously charged under two of
the three gauge fields, and exhibit an entropic interaction dictated by these
charges. We also show that the distribution of flux loops shows a scaling with
loop length and system size previously identified as characteristic of Coulomb
phases
Pitfalls of participatory programs : evidence from a randomized evaluation in education in India
Participation of beneficiaries in the monitoring of public services is increasingly seen as key to improving their efficiency. In India, the current government flagship program on universal primary education organizes community members, specifically locally elected leaders and parents of children enrolled in public schools, into committees and gives these powers over resource allocation, monitoring and management of school performance. However, in a baseline survey this paper finds that people were not aware of the existence of these committees and their potential for improving education. The paper evaluates three different interventions to encourage beneficiaries'participation: providing information, training community members in a new testing tool, and training and organizing volunteers to hold remedial reading camps for illiterate children. The authors find that these interventions had no impact on community involvement in public schools, and no impact on teacher effort or learning outcomes in those schools. However, the intervention that trained volunteers to teach children to read had large impact on activity outside public schools -- local youths volunteered to be trained, and children who attended these camps substantially improved their reading skills. These results suggest that citizens face substantial constraints in participating to improve the public education system, even when they care about education and are willing to do something to improve it.Primary Education,Education For All,Teaching and Learning,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Tertiary Education,Economics of Education
Prethermalization without Temperature
While a clean, driven system generically absorbs energy until it reaches "infinite temperature," it may do so very slowly exhibiting what is known as a prethermal regime. Here, we show that the emergence of an additional approximately conserved quantity in a periodically driven (Floquet) system can give rise to an analogous long-lived regime. This can allow for nontrivial dynamics, even from initial states that are at a high or infinite temperature with respect to an effective Hamiltonian governing the prethermal dynamics. We present concrete settings with such a prethernial regime, one with a period-doubled (time-crystalline) response. We also present a direct diagnostic to distinguish this prethermal phenomenon from its infinitely long-lived many-body localized cousin. We apply these insights to a model of the recent NMR experiments by Rovny et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 120, 180603 (2018)] which, intriguingly, detected signatures of a Floquet time crystal in a clean three-dimensional material. We show that a mild but subtle variation of their driving protocol can increase the lifetime of the time-crystalline signal by orders of magnitude
Energies of Quantum QED Flux Tubes
In this talk I present recent studies on vacuum polarization energies and
energy densities induced by QED flux tubes. I focus on comparing three and four
dimensional scenarios and the discussion of various approximation schemes in
view of the exact treatment.Comment: 9 pages latex, Talk presented at the QFEXT 05 workshop in Barcelona,
Sept. 2005. To appear in the proceeding
Floquet Prethermalization in a Bose-Hubbard System
Periodic driving has emerged as a powerful tool in the quest to engineer new
and exotic quantum phases. While driven many-body systems are generically
expected to absorb energy indefinitely and reach an infinite-temperature state,
the rate of heating can be exponentially suppressed when the drive frequency is
large compared to the local energy scales of the system -- leading to
long-lived 'prethermal' regimes. In this work, we experimentally study a
bosonic cloud of ultracold atoms in a driven optical lattice and identify such
a prethermal regime in the Bose-Hubbard model. By measuring the energy
absorption of the cloud as the driving frequency is increased, we observe an
exponential-in-frequency reduction of the heating rate persisting over more
than 2 orders of magnitude. The tunability of the lattice potentials allows us
to explore one- and two-dimensional systems in a range of different interacting
regimes. Alongside the exponential decrease, the dependence of the heating rate
on the frequency displays features characteristic of the phase diagram of the
Bose-Hubbard model, whose understanding is additionally supported by numerical
simulations in one dimension. Our results show experimental evidence of the
phenomenon of Floquet prethermalization, and provide insight into the
characterization of heating for driven bosonic systems
Avalanches and many-body resonances in many-body localized systems
We numerically study both the avalanche instability and many-body resonances in strongly disordered spin chains exhibiting many-body localization (MBL). Finite-size systems behave like MBL within the MBL regimes, which we divide into the asymptotic MBL phase and the finite-size MBL regime; the latter regime is, however, thermal in the limit of large systems and long times. In both Floquet and Hamiltonian models, we identify some landmarks within the MBL regimes. Our first landmark is an estimate of where the MBL phase becomes unstable to avalanches, obtained by measuring the slowest relaxation rate of a finite chain coupled to an infinite bath at one end. Our estimates indicate that the actual MBL-to-thermal phase transition occurs much deeper in the MBL regimes than has been suggested by most previous studies. Our other landmarks involve systemwide many-body resonances: We find that the effective matrix elements producing eigenstates with systemwide many-body resonances are enormously broadly distributed. This broad distribution means that the onset of such resonances in typical samples occurs quite deep in the MBL regimes, and the first such resonances typically involve rare pairs of eigenstates that are farther apart in energy than the minimum gap. Thus we find that the resonance properties define two landmarks that divide the MBL regimes of finite-size systems into three subregimes: (i) at strongest randomness, typical samples do not have any eigenstates that are involved in systemwide many-body resonances; (ii) there is a substantial intermediate subregime where typical samples do have such resonances but the pair of eigenstates with the minimum spectral gap does not, so the size of the minimum gap agrees with expectations from Poisson statistics; and (iii) in the weaker randomness subregime, the minimum gap is larger than predicted by Poisson level statistics because it is involved in a many-body resonance and thus subject to level repulsion. Nevertheless, even in this third subregime, all but a vanishing fraction of eigenstates remain nonresonant and the system thus still appears MBL in most respects. Based on our estimates of the location of the avalanche instability, it might be that the MBL phase is only part of subregime (i) and the other subregimes are entirely in the thermal phase, even though they look localized in most respects, so are in the finite-size MBL regime
Numerical Investigation of Monopole Chains
We present numerical results for chains of SU(2) BPS monopoles constructed
from Nahm data. The long chain limit reveals an asymmetric behavior transverse
to the periodic direction, with the asymmetry becoming more pronounced at
shorter separations. This analysis is motivated by a search for semiclassical
finite temperature instantons in the 3D SU(2) Georgi-Glashow model, but it
appears that in the periodic limit the instanton chains either have
logarithmically divergent action or wash themselves out.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures; v2 minor changes, published versio
- …