26 research outputs found

    Electronic properties of Luttinger Liquid with electron-phonon interaction

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    This thesis addresses a theoretical study of the problem of a single impurity embedded in a one-dimensional system of interacting electrons in presence of electron-phonon coupling. First we consider a system with a featureless point-like potential impurity, followed by the case of a resonant level hybridised with a Luttinger Liquid. The stress is made on a more fundamental problem of a featureless scatterer, for which two opposite limits in the impurity strength are considered: a weak scatterer and a weak link. We have found that, regardless of the transmission properties of phonons through the impurity, the scaling dimensions of the conductance in these limits obey the duality condition, â–³WS \triangle_{WS} â–³WL \triangle_{WL} = 1, known for the Luttinger Liquid in the absence of phonons. However, in the case when the strength of phonon scattering is correlated with electron scattering by the impurity, we find a nontrivial phase diagram with up to three fixed points and a possibility of a metal-insulator transition. We also consider the case of a weakly interacting electron-phonon system in the presence of a single impurity of an arbitrary scattering potential. In the problem of a resonant level attached to the Luttinger Liquid we show that the electron-phonon coupling significantly modifies the effective energy-dependent width of the resonant level in two different geometries, corresponding to the resonant and anti-resonant transmission in the Fermi gas

    Experimental high-dimensional Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger entanglement with superconducting transmon qutrits

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    Multipartite entanglement is one of the core concepts in quantum information science with broad applications that span from condensed matter physics to quantum physics foundations tests. Although its most studied and tested forms encompass two-dimensional systems, current quantum platforms technically allow the manipulation of additional quantum levels. We report the first experimental demonstration of a high-dimensional multipartite entangled state in a superconducting quantum processor. We generate the three-qutrit Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger state by designing the necessary pulses to perform high-dimensional quantum operations. We obtain the fidelity of 78±1%78\pm 1\%, proving the generation of a genuine three-partite and three-dimensional entangled state. To this date, only photonic devices have been able to create and manipulate these high-dimensional states. Our work demonstrates that another platform, superconducting systems, is ready to exploit high-dimensional physics phenomena and that a programmable quantum device accessed on the cloud can be used to design and execute experiments beyond binary quantum computation.Comment: 6 pages + 6 supplementary information, 3 figures, 1 tabl
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