106 research outputs found
Negative differential conductance induced by spin-charge separation
Spin-charge states of correlated electrons in a one-dimensional quantum dot
attached to interacting leads are studied in the non-linear transport regime.
With non-symmetric tunnel barriers, regions of negative differential
conductance induced by spin-charge separation are found. They are due to a
correlation-induced trapping of higher-spin states without magnetic field, and
associated with a strong increase in the fluctuations of the electron spin.Comment: REVTEX, 4 pages including 3 figures; Accepted for publication on
Physical Review Letter
Resonators coupled to voltage-biased Josephson junctions: From linear response to strongly driven nonlinear oscillations
Motivated by recent experiments, where a voltage biased Josephson junction is
placed in series with a resonator, the classical dynamics of the circuit is
studied in various domains of parameter space. This problem can be mapped onto
the dissipative motion of a single degree of freedom in a nonlinear
time-dependent potential, where in contrast to conventional settings the
nonlinearity appears in the driving while the static potential is purely
harmonic. For long times the system approaches steady states which are analyzed
in the underdamped regime over the full range of driving parameters including
the fundamental resonance as well as higher and sub-harmonics. Observables such
as the dc-Josephson current and the radiated microwave power give direct
information about the underlying dynamics covering phenomena as bifurcations,
irregular motion, up- and down conversion. Due to their tunability, present and
future set-ups provide versatile platforms to explore the changeover from
linear response to strongly nonlinear behavior in driven dissipative systems
under well defined conditions.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure
Exact c-number Representation of Non-Markovian Quantum Dissipation
The reduced dynamics of a quantum system interacting with a linear heat bath
finds an exact representation in terms of a stochastic Schr{\"o}dinger
equation. All memory effects of the reservoir are transformed into noise
correlations and mean-field friction. The classical limit of the resulting
stochastic dynamics is shown to be a generalized Langevin equation, and
conventional quantum state diffusion is recovered in the Born--Markov
approximation. The non-Markovian exact dynamics, valid at arbitrary temperature
and damping strength, is exemplified by an application to the dissipative
two-state system.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. To be published in Phys. Rev. Let
Efficient low temperature simulations for fermionic reservoirs with the hierarchical equations of motion method: Application to the Anderson impurity model
The hierarchical equations of motion (HEOM) approach is an accurate method to
simulate open system quantum dynamics, which allows for systematic convergence
to numerically exact results. To represent the effects of the bath, the
reservoir correlation functions are usually decomposed into the summation of
multiple exponential terms in the HEOM method. Since the reservoir correlation
functions become highly non-Markovian at low temperatures or when the bath has
complex band structures, a present challenge is to obtain accurate exponential
decompositions that allow efficient simulation with the HEOM. In this work, we
employ the barycentric representation to approximate the Fermi function and
hybridization functions in the frequency domain. The new method, by
approximating these functions with optimized rational decomposition, greatly
reduces the number of basis functions in decomposing the reservoir correlation
functions, which further allows the HEOM method to be applied to ultra-low
temperature and general bath structures. We demonstrate the efficiency,
accuracy, and long-time stability of the new decomposition scheme by applying
it to the Anderson impurity model (AIM) in the low-temperature regime with the
Lorentzian and tight-binding hybridization functions.Comment: 39 pages, 12 figure
Taming quantum noise for efficient low temperature simulations of open quantum systems
The hierarchical equations of motion (HEOM), derived from the exact
Feynman-Vernon path integral, is one of the most powerful numerical methods to
simulate the dynamics of open quantum systems that are embedded in thermal
environments. However, its applicability is restricted to specific forms of
spectral reservoir distributions and relatively elevated temperatures. Here we
solve this problem and introduce an effective treatment of quantum noise in
frequency space by systematically clustering higher order Matsubara poles
equivalent to an optimized rational decomposition. This leads to an elegant
extension of the HEOM to arbitrary temperatures and very general reservoirs in
combination with efficiency, high accuracy and long-time stability. Moreover,
the technique can directly be implemented in alternative approaches such as
Greens-function, stochastic, and pseudo-mode formulations. As one highly
non-trivial application, for the sub-ohmic spin-boson model at vanishing
temperature the Shiba relation is quantitatively verified which predicts the
long-time decay of correlation functions.Comment: 11pages, 8 figures. v2: grant number correcte
Nonlinear response theory for lossy superconducting quantum circuits
We introduce a numerically exact and yet computationally feasible nonlinear
response theory developed for lossy superconducting quantum circuits based on a
framework of quantum dissipation in a minimally extended state space. Starting
from the Feynman--Vernon path integral formalism for open quantum systems with
the system degrees of freedom being the nonlinear elements of the circuit, we
eliminate the temporally non-local influence functional of all linear elements
by introducing auxiliary harmonic modes with complex-valued frequencies coupled
to the non-linear degrees of freedom of the circuit. In our work, we propose a
concept of time-averaged observables, inspired by experiment, and provide an
explicit formula for producing their quasiprobability distribution.
Furthermore, we systematically derive a weak-coupling approximation in the
presence of a drive, and demonstrate the applicability of our formalism through
a study on the dispersive readout of a superconducting qubit. The developed
framework enables a comprehensive fully quantum-mechanical treatment of
nonlinear quantum circuits coupled to their environment, without the
limitations of typical approaches to weak dissipation, high temperature, and
weak drive. Furthermore, we discuss the implications of our findings to the
quantum measurement theory.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, 2 table
Brachistochrone of Entanglement for Spin Chains
We analytically investigate the role of entanglement in time-optimal state
evolution as an appli- cation of the quantum brachistochrone, a general method
for obtaining the optimal time-dependent Hamiltonian for reaching a target
quantum state. As a model, we treat two qubits indirectly cou- pled through an
intermediate qubit that is directly controllable, which represents a typical
situation in quantum information processing. We find the time-optimal unitary
evolution law and quantify residual entanglement by the two-tangle between the
indirectly coupled qubits, for all possible sets of initial pure quantum states
of a tripartite system. The integrals of the motion of the brachistochrone are
determined by fixing the minimal time at which the residual entanglement is
maximized. Entan- glement plays a role for W and GHZ initial quantum states,
and for the bi-separable initial state in which the indirectly coupled qubits
have a nonzero value of the 2-tangle.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Scaling and universality in the anisotropic Kondo model and the dissipative two-state system
Scaling and universality in the Ohmic two-state system is investigated by
exploiting the equivalence of this model to the anisotropic Kondo model. For
the Ohmic two-state system, we find universal scaling functions for the
specific heat, , static susceptibility, , and
spin relaxation function depending on the reduced
temperature (frequency ), with
the renormalized tunneling frequency, and uniquely specified by the dissipation
strength (). The scaling functions can be used to extract
and in experimental realizations.Comment: 5 pages (LaTeX), 4 EPS figures. Minor changes, typos corrected,
journal reference adde
Coherence correlations in the dissipative two-state system
We study the dynamical equilibrium correlation function of the
polaron-dressed tunneling operator in the dissipative two-state system. Unlike
the position operator, this coherence operator acts in the full
system-plus-reservoir space. We calculate the relevant modified influence
functional and present the exact formal expression for the coherence
correlations in the form of a series in the number of tunneling events. For an
Ohmic spectral density with the particular damping strength , the series
is summed in analytic form for all times and for arbitrary values of
temperature and bias. Using a diagrammatic approach, we find the long-time
dynamics in the regime . In general, the coherence correlations decay
algebraically as at T=0. This implies that the linear static
susceptibility diverges for as , whereas it stays finite for
in this limit. The qualitative differences with respect to the
asymptotic behavior of the position correlations are explained.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
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