18 research outputs found
Topological classification of dynamical phase transitions
Dynamical phase transitions (DPT) are characterized by nonanalytical time
evolution of the dynamical free energy. For general 2-band systems in one and
two dimensions (eg. SSH model, Kitaev-chain, Haldane model, p+ip
superconductor, etc.), we show that the time evolution of the dynamical free
energy is crucially affected by the ground state topology of both the initial
and final Hamiltonians, implying DPTs when the topology is changed under the
quench. Similarly to edge states in topological insulators, DPTs can be
classified as being topologically protected or not. In 1D systems the number of
topologically protected non-equilibrium time scales are determined by the
difference between the initial and final winding numbers, while in 2D no such
relation exists for the Chern numbers. The singularities of dynamical free
energy in the 2D case are qualitatively different from those of the 1D case,
the cusps appear only in the first time derivative.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Disentangling dynamical phase transitions from equilibrium phase transitions
Dynamical phase transitions (DPT) occur after quenching some global
parameters in quantum systems and are signalled by the non-analytical time
evolution of the dynamical free energy, which is calculated from the Loschmidt
overlap between the initial and time evolved states. In a recent letter (M.
Heyl et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. \textbf{110}, 135704 (2013)), it was suggested
that DPTs are closely related to equilibrium phase transitions (EPT) for the
transverse field Ising model. By studying a minimal model, the XY chain in
transverse magnetic field, we show analytically that this connection does not
hold generally. We present examples where DPT occurs without crossing any
equilibrium critical lines by the quench, and a nontrivial example with no DPT
but crossing a critical line by the quench. Albeit the non-analyticities of the
dynamical free energy on the real time axis do not indicate the presence or
absence of an EPT, the structure of Fisher-lines for complex times reveal a
qualitative difference.Comment: 5+1 pages, 3+1 figures; typos correcte
Nonequilibrium transport and statistics of Schwinger pair production in Weyl semimetals
The non-equilibrium dynamics beyond linear response of Weyl semimetals is
studied after a sudden switching on of a DC electric field. The resulting
current is a nonmonotonic function of time, with an initial quick increase of
polarization current followed by a power-law decay. Particle-hole creation \`a
la Schwinger dominates for long times when the conduction current takes over
the leading role, with the total current increasing again. The conductivity
estimated from a dynamical calculation within a Drude picture agrees with the
one obtained from Kubo's formula. The full distribution function of
electron-hole pairs changes from Poissonian for short perturbations to a
Gaussian in the long perturbation (Landau-Zener) regime. The vacuum persistence
probability of high energy physics manifests itself in a finite probability of
no pair creation and no induced current at all times.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Floquet topological phases coupled to environments and the induced photocurrent
We consider the fate of a helical edge state of a spin Hall insulator and its
topological transition in presence of a circularly polarized light when coupled
to various forms of environments. A Lindblad type equation is developed to
determine the fermion occupation of the Floquet bands. We find by using
analytical and numerical methods that non-secular terms, corresponding to
2-photon transitions, lead to a mixing of the band occupations, hence the light
induced photocurrent is in general not perfectly quantized in the presence of
finite coupling to the environment, although deviations are small in the
adiabatic limit. Sharp crossovers are identified at frequencies and
( is the strength of light-matter coupling) with
the former resembling to a phase transition.Comment: 7+4 pages, 6+2 figure
Remarkable impact of PAHs and TPHs on the richness and diversity of bacterial species in surface soils exposed to long-term hydrocarbon pollution
Nowadays, because of substantial use of
petroleum-derived fuels the number and extension of
hydrocarbon polluted terrestrial ecosystems is in growth
worldwide. In remediation of aforementioned sites bioremediation
still tends to be an innovative, environmentally
attractive technology. Although huge amount of information
is available concerning the hydrocarbon degradation
potential of cultivable hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria little is
known about the in situ long-term effects of petroleum
derived compounds on the structure of soil microbiota.
Therefore, in this study our aim was to determine the longterm
impact of total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPHs),
volatile petroleum hydrocarbons (VPHs), total alkyl benzenes
(TABs) as well as of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
(PAHs) on the structure of bacterial communities of
four different contaminated soil samples. Our results
indicated that a very high amount of TPH affected positively
the diversity of hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria. This
finding was supported by the occurrence of representatives
of the a-, b-, c-Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, Flavobacteriia
and Bacilli classes. High concentration of
VPHs and TABs contributed to the predominance of actinobacterial
isolates. In PAH impacted samples the concentration
of PAHs negatively correlated with the diversity
of bacterial species. Heavily PAH polluted soil samples
were mainly inhabited by the representatives of the b-, c-
Proteobacteria (overwhelming dominance of Pseudomonas
sp.) and Actinobacteria
Diverging dc conductivity due to a flat band in disordered pseudospin-1 Dirac-Weyl fermions
Several lattices, such as the dice or the Lieb lattice, possess Dirac cones and a flat band crossing
the Dirac point, whose effective model is the pseudospin-1 Dirac-Weyl equation. We investigate
the fate of the flat band in the presence of disorder by focusing on the density of states (DOS)
and dc conductivity. While the central hub-site does not reveal the presence of the flat band, the
sublattice resolved DOS on the non-central sites exhibits a narrow peak with height 1/pg with
g the dimensionless disorder variance. Although the group velocity is zero on the flat band, the
dc conductivity diverges as ln(1/g) with decreasing disorder due to interband transitions around
the band touching point between the propagating and the flat band. Generalizations to higher
pseudospin are given
aiMotive Dataset: A Multimodal Dataset for Robust Autonomous Driving with Long-Range Perception
Autonomous driving is a popular research area within the computer vision
research community. Since autonomous vehicles are highly safety-critical,
ensuring robustness is essential for real-world deployment. While several
public multimodal datasets are accessible, they mainly comprise two sensor
modalities (camera, LiDAR) which are not well suited for adverse weather. In
addition, they lack far-range annotations, making it harder to train neural
networks that are the base of a highway assistant function of an autonomous
vehicle. Therefore, we introduce a multimodal dataset for robust autonomous
driving with long-range perception. The dataset consists of 176 scenes with
synchronized and calibrated LiDAR, camera, and radar sensors covering a
360-degree field of view. The collected data was captured in highway, urban,
and suburban areas during daytime, night, and rain and is annotated with 3D
bounding boxes with consistent identifiers across frames. Furthermore, we
trained unimodal and multimodal baseline models for 3D object detection. Data
are available at \url{https://github.com/aimotive/aimotive_dataset}.Comment: The paper was accepted to ICLR 2023 Workshop Scene Representations
for Autonomous Drivin