270 research outputs found
Topological Heat Transport and Symmetry-Protected Boson Currents
The study of non-equilibrium properties in topological systems is of
practical and fundamental importance. Here, we analyze the stationary
properties of a two-dimensional bosonic Hofstadter lattice coupled to two
thermal baths in the quantum open-system formalism. Novel phenomena appear like
chiral edge heat currents that are the out-of-equilibrium counterparts of the
zero-temperature edge currents. They support a new concept of dissipative
symmetry-protection, where a set of discrete symmetries protects topological
heat currents, differing from the symmetry-protection devised in closed systems
and zero-temperature. Remarkably, one of these currents flows opposite to the
decreasing external temperature gradient. As the starting point, we consider
the case of a single external reservoir already showing prominent results like
thermal erasure effects and topological thermal currents. Our results are
experimentally accessible with platforms like photonics systems and optical
lattices.Comment: RevTeX4 file, color figure
Symmetry-protected Topological Phases at Finite Temperature
We have applied the recently developed theory of topological Uhlmann numbers
to a representative model of a topological insulator in two dimensions, the
Qi-Wu-Zhang model. We have found a stable symmetry-protected topological (SPT)
phase under external thermal fluctuations in two-dimensions. A complete phase
diagram for this model is computed as a function of temperature and coupling
constants in the original Hamiltonian. It shows the appearance of large stable
phases of matter with topological properties compatible with thermal
fluctuations or external noise and the existence of critical lines separating
abruptly trivial phases from topological phases. These novel critical
temperatures represent thermal topological phase transitions. The initial part
of the paper comprises a self-contained explanation of the Uhlmann geometric
phase needed to understand the topological properties that it may acquire when
applied to topological insulators and superconductors.Comment: Contribution to the focus issue on "Artificial Graphene". Edited by
Maciej Lewenstein, Vittorio Pellegrini, Marco Polini and Mordechai (Moti)
Sege
Observation of topological Uhlmann phases with superconducting qubits
Topological insulators and superconductors at finite temperature can be
characterized by the topological Uhlmann phase. However, a direct experimental
measurement of this invariant has remained elusive in condensed matter systems.
Here, we report a measurement of the topological Uhlmann phase for a
topological insulator simulated by a system of entangled qubits in the IBM
Quantum Experience platform. By making use of ancilla states, otherwise
unobservable phases carrying topological information about the system become
accessible, enabling the experimental determination of a complete phase diagram
including environmental effects. We employ a state-independent measurement
protocol which does not involve prior knowledge of the system state. The
proposed measurement scheme is extensible to interacting particles and
topological models with a large number of bands.Comment: RevTex4 file, color figure
Robust nonequilibrium edge currents with and without band topology
We study two-dimensional bosonic and fermionic lattice systems under
nonequilibrium conditions corresponding to a sharp gradient of temperature
imposed by two thermal baths. In particular, we consider a lattice model with
broken time-reversal symmetry that exhibits both topologically trivial and
nontrivial phases. Using a nonperturbative approach, we characterize the
nonequilibrium current distribution in different parameter regimes. For both
bosonic and fermionic systems weakly coupled to the reservoirs, we find chiral
edge currents that are robust against defects on the boundary or in the bulk.
This robustness not only originates from topological effects at zero
temperature but, remarkably, also persists as a result of dissipative
symmetries in regimes where band topology plays no role. Chirality of the edge
currents implies that energy locally flows against the temperature gradient
without any external work input. In the fermionic case, there is also a regime
with topologically protected boundary currents, which nonetheless do not
circulate around all system edges.Comment: 5+4 pages, 4+2 figures. Comments welcom
Uhlmann phase as a topological measure for one-dimensional fermion systems
We introduce the Uhlmann geometric phase as a tool to characterize symmetry-protected topological phases in one-dimensional fermion systems, such as topological insulators and superconductors. Since this phase is formulated for general mixed quantum states, it provides a way to extend topological properties to finite temperature situations. We illustrate these ideas with some paradigmatic models and find that there exists a critical temperature Tc at which the Uhlmann phase goes discontinuously and abruptly to zero. This stands as a borderline between two different topological phases as a function of the temperature. Furthermore, at small temperatures we recover the usual notion of topological phase in fermion systems
Iterative Phase Optimization of Elementary Quantum Error Correcting Codes
Performing experiments on small-scale quantum computers is certainly a challenging endeavor. Many parameters need to be optimized to achieve high-fidelity operations. This can be done efficiently for operations acting on single qubits, as errors can be fully characterized. For multiqubit operations, though, this is no longer the case, as in the most general case, analyzing the effect of the operation on the system requires a full state tomography for which resources scale exponentially with the system size. Furthermore, in recent experiments, additional electronic levels beyond the two-level system encoding the qubit have been used to enhance the capabilities of quantum-information processors, which additionally increases the number of parameters that need to be controlled. For the optimization of the experimental system for a given task (e.g., a quantum algorithm), one has to find a satisfactory error model and also efficient observables to estimate the parameters of the model. In this manuscript, we demonstrate a method to optimize the encoding procedure for a small quantum error correction code in the presence of unknown but constant phase shifts. The method, which we implement here on a small-scale linear ion-trap quantum computer, is readily applicable to other AMO platforms for quantum-information processing
Throughflow Velocity Crossing the Dome of Erupting Bubbles in 2-D Fluidized Beds
A new non-intrusive method for measuring the throughflow velocity crossing the dome of erupting bubbles in freely bubbling 2-D fluidized beds is presented. Using a high speed video-camera, the dome acceleration, drag force and throughflow velocity profiles are obtained for different experiments, varying the superficial gas velocity. The acceleration profiles show greater values in the dome zone where the gravity component is negligible. The drag force and the throughflow velocity profiles show a uniform value in the central region of the dome (40 deg \u3c \u3c 140 deg) and the total throughflow increases with the superficial gas velocity
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