314 research outputs found
Geometrically protected triple-point crossings in an optical lattice
We show how to realize topologically protected crossings of three energy
bands, integer-spin analogs of Weyl fermions, in three-dimensional optical
lattices. Our proposal only involves ultracold atom techniques that have
already been experimentally demonstrated and leads to isolated triple-point
crossings (TPCs) which are required to exist by a novel combination of lattice
symmetries. The symmetries also allow for a new type of topological object, the
type-II, or tilted, TPC. Our Rapid Communication shows that spin-1 Weyl points,
which have not yet been observed in the bandstructure of crystals, are within
reach of ultracold atom experiments.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures + 3 pages, 3 figures supplemental material. Added
appendix on model symmetries, fixed typos and added references. This is the
final, published versio
Braiding of non-Abelian anyons using pairwise interactions
The common approach to topological quantum computation is to implement
quantum gates by adiabatically moving non-Abelian anyons around each other.
Here we present an alternative perspective based on the possibility of
realizing the exchange (braiding) operators of anyons by adiabatically varying
pairwise interactions between them rather than their positions. We analyze a
system composed by four anyons whose couplings define a T-junction and we show
that the braiding operator of two of them can be obtained through a particular
adiabatic cycle in the space of the coupling parameters. We also discuss how to
couple this scheme with anyonic chains in order to recover the topological
protection.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures. Errors corrected, clarifications and comments
adde
Effects of disorder on Coulomb-assisted braiding of Majorana zero modes
Majorana zero modes in one-dimensional topological superconductors obey
non-Abelian braiding statistics. Braiding manipulations can be realized by
controlling Coulomb couplings in hybrid Majorana-transmon devices. However,
strong disorder may induce accidental Majorana modes, which are expected to
have detrimental effects on braiding statistics. Nevertheless, we show that the
Coulomb-assisted braiding protocol is efficiently realized also in the presence
of accidental modes. The errors occurring during the braiding cycle are small
if the couplings of the computational Majorana modes to the accidental ones are
much weaker than the maximum Coulomb coupling.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, this is the final, published versio
Reaching the quantum Hall regime with rotating Rydberg-dressed atoms
Despite the striking progress in the field of quantum gases, one of their much anticipated applications-the simulation of quantum Hall states-remains elusive: all experimental approaches so far have failed in reaching a sufficiently small ratio between atom and vortex densities. In this paper we consider rotating Rydberg-dressed atoms in magnetic traps: these gases offer strong and tunable nonlocal repulsive interactions and very low densities; hence they provide an exceptional platform to reach the quantum Hall regime. Based on the Lindemann criterion and the analysis of the interplay of the length scales of the system, we show that there exists an optimal value of the dressing parameters that minimizes the ratio between the filling factor of the system and its critical value to enter the Hall regime, thus making it possible to reach this strongly correlated phase for more than 1000 atoms under realistic conditions
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