256 research outputs found

    Quantum Kerr oscillators' evolution in phase space : Wigner current, symmetries, shear suppression and special states

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    ©2019 American Physical Society. All rights reserved. This is the author-prepared / formatted version of an article accepted for publication in Physical Review A. The definitive publisher-authenticated version is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.99.032104The creation of quantum coherences requires a system to be anharmonic. The simplest such continuous one-dimensional quantum system is the Kerr oscillator. It has a number of interesting symmetries we derive. Its quantum dynamics is best studied in phase space, using Wigner's distribution W and the associated Wigner phase space current J. Expressions for the continuity equation governing its time evolution are derived in terms of J and it is shown that J for Kerr oscillators follows circles in phase space. Using J we also show that the evolution's classical shear in phase space is quantum suppressed by an effective "viscosity." Quantifying this shear suppression provides measures to contrast classical with quantum evolution and allows us to identify special quantum states.Peer reviewe

    The Quantum Wigner Current: a Geometric Approach to Quantum Dynamics in Phase Space

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    Phase space is the unity of position and momentum configuration space. It allows for an effective description of dynamical systems and is particularly useful when it comes to studying chaos theory and statistical mechanics. After the advent of quantum physics early in the 20th century, E. Wigner [91], J. E. Moyal [62] and H. J. Groenewold [31] introduce a quantum theory in phase space. Despite the apparent added complexity of the mathematics involved in this new framework, the underlying classical and quantum equations show many similarities. The probability distribution in classical physics becomes the Wigner distribution, a probability distribution usually featuring negative values. In 2013, O. Steuernagel and D. Kakofengitis, inspired by the work of H. Bauke [7] and E. Wigner [91], identified the quantum analogue of the classical phase space flow: the Wigner current J [83]. This Wigner current allows the visualisation of quantum dynamics through a quantum fluid dynamics perspective in phase space. This thesis is written by collection of five articles. They are prefaced by an introduction into the basics of quantum phase space theory and its link with both classical phase space dynamics and the standard Schrödinger approach, followed by the articles published during this PhD. Article 1 shows the importance of the integral form of the Wigner current. We use it to derive the Ehrenfest’s theorem, as well as to refute some propositions made within the community. Article 2 shows that, using the Wigner current, an Eulerian and Lagrangian point of view do not always give the same results for the quantum case. We demonstrate that the negativities of the Wigner distribution, sign of quantumness of the system, are created by the Wigner velocity field singularities. The Wigner velocity field is the quantum analogue of the classical phase space velocity field. In Article 3, we see that even though Wigner distributions of quantum systems feature spotty structures which saturate on scales ɑZ [97], the construction of a superoscillating Wigner distribution allows one to generate much smaller structures, of the order of ɑZ /α with α a positive constant potentially very large. In Article 4, we introduce the concept of quantum shear suppression in phase space. The Wigner current features an effective quantum “viscosity”, suppressing classical dynamics fine details. This viscosity is the mechanism by which the Zurek scale is enforced dynamically onto the state in phase space. In Article 5, we apply the previous ideas to Kerr-type oscillators. Its Wigner current is derived, and using it we show that its values are conserved on a ring during the time evolution of the Kerr oscillator. The shear suppression is also studied

    An entanglement-aware quantum computer simulation algorithm

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    The advent of quantum computers promises exponential speed ups in the execution of various computational tasks. While their capabilities are hindered by quantum decoherence, they can be exactly simulated on classical hardware at the cost of an exponential scaling in terms of number of qubits. To circumvent this, quantum states can be represented as matrix product states (MPS), a product of tensors separated by so-called bond dimensions. Limiting bond dimensions growth approximates the state, but also limits its ability to represent entanglement. Methods based on this representation have been the most popular tool at simulating large quantum systems. But how to trust resulting approximate quantum states for such intractable systems sizes ? I propose here a method for inferring the fidelity of an approximate quantum state without direct comparison to its exact counterpart, and use it to design an ``entanglement-aware'' (EA) algorithm for both pure and mixed states. As opposed to state of the art methods which limit bond dimensions up to an arbitrary maximum value, this algorithm receives as input a fidelity, and adapts dynamically its bond dimensions to both local entanglement and noise such that the final quantum state fidelity at least reaches the input fidelity. I show that this algorithm far surpasses standard fixed bond dimension truncation schemes. In particular, a noiseless random circuit of 300 qubits and depth 75 simulated using MPS methods takes one week of computation time, while EA-MPS only needs 2 hours to reach similar quantum state fidelity

    Anharmonic quantum mechanical systems do not feature phase space trajectories

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    © 2017 Elsevier. This manuscript is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). For further details please see: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Phase space dynamics in classical mechanics is described by transport along trajectories. Anharmonic quantum mechanical systems do not allow for a trajectory-based description of their phase space dynamics. This invalidates some approaches to quantum phase space studies. We first demonstrate the absence of trajectories in general terms. We then give an explicit proof for all quantum phase space distributions with negative values: we show that the generation of coherences in anharmonic quantum mechanical systems is responsible for the occurrence of singularities in their phase space velocity fields, and vice versa. This explains numerical problems repeatedly reported in the literature, and provides deeper insight into the nature of quantum phase space dynamics.Peer reviewe

    Wigner's representation of quantum mechanics in integral form and its applications

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    This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Dimitris Kakofengitis, Maxime Oliva, and Ole Steuernagel, ‘Wigner's representation of quantum mechanics in integral form and its applications’, Physical Review A, Vol. 95, 022127, published 27 February 2017. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.95.022127 ©2017 American Physical Society.We consider quantum phase space dynamics using the Wigner representation of quantum mechanics. We stress the usefulness of the integral form for the description of Wigner's phase space current~J\bm J as an alternative to the popular Moyal bracket. The integral form brings out the symmetries between momentum and position representations of quantum mechanics, is numerically stable, and allows us to perform some calculations using elementary integrals instead of Groenewold star-products. Our central result is an explicit, elementary proof which shows that only systems up to quadratic in their potential fulfil Liouville's theorem of volume preservation in quantum mechanics. Contrary to a recent suggestion, our proof shows that the non-Liouvillian character of quantum phase space dynamics cannot be transformed away.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio

    Structures far below sub-Planck scale in quantum phase-space through superoscillations

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    This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Maxime Oliva and Ole Steuernagel, 'Structures far below the sub-Planck scale in quantum phase space through superoscillations', PHYSICAL REVIEW A 95, 052112 (2017), DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevA.95.052112, published 15 May 2017. ©2017 American Physical Society.In 2001, Zurek derived the generic minimum scale aZa_{Z} for the area of structures of Wigner's quantum phase distribution. Here we show by construction, using superoscillatory functions, that the Wigner distribution can locally show regular spotty structures on scales much below Zurek's scale aZa_{Z}. The price to pay for the presence of such structures is their exponential smallness. For the case we construct there is no increased interferometric sensitivity from the presence of patches with superoscillatory structure in phase-space.Peer reviewe

    Dynamic shear suppression in quantum phase space

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    © 2019 American Physical Society. All rights reserved.Classical phase space flow is inviscid. Here we show that in quantum phase space Wigner's probability current J can be effectively viscous. This results in shear suppression in quantum phase space dynamics which enforces Zurek's limit for the minimum size scale of spotty structures that develop dynamically. Quantum shear suppression is given by gradients of the quantum terms of J's vorticity. Used as a new measure of quantum dynamics applied to several evolving closed conservative 1D bound state systems, we find that shear suppression explains the saturation at Zurek's scale limit and additionally singles out special quantum states.Peer reviewe

    Uncovering the spatial structure of mobility networks

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    The extraction of a clear and simple footprint of the structure of large, weighted and directed networks is a general problem that has many applications. An important example is given by origin-destination matrices which contain the complete information on commuting flows, but are difficult to analyze and compare. We propose here a versatile method which extracts a coarse-grained signature of mobility networks, under the form of a 2×22\times 2 matrix that separates the flows into four categories. We apply this method to origin-destination matrices extracted from mobile phone data recorded in thirty-one Spanish cities. We show that these cities essentially differ by their proportion of two types of flows: integrated (between residential and employment hotspots) and random flows, whose importance increases with city size. Finally the method allows to determine categories of networks, and in the mobility case to classify cities according to their commuting structure.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures +Supplementary informatio

    From mobile phone data to the spatial structure of cities

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    Pervasive infrastructures, such as cell phone networks, enable to capture large amounts of human behavioral data but also provide information about the structure of cities and their dynamical properties. In this article, we focus on these last aspects by studying phone data recorded during 55 days in 31 Spanish metropolitan areas. We first define an urban dilatation index which measures how the average distance between individuals evolves during the day, allowing us to highlight different types of city structure. We then focus on hotspots, the most crowded places in the city. We propose a parameter free method to detect them and to test the robustness of our results. The number of these hotspots scales sublinearly with the population size, a result in agreement with previous theoretical arguments and measures on employment datasets. We study the lifetime of these hotspots and show in particular that the hierarchy of permanent ones, which constitute the "heart" of the city, is very stable whatever the size of the city. The spatial structure of these hotspots is also of interest and allows us to distinguish different categories of cities, from monocentric and "segregated" where the spatial distribution is very dependent on land use, to polycentric where the spatial mixing between land uses is much more important. These results point towards the possibility of a new, quantitative classification of cities using high resolution spatio-temporal data.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figure
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