Quantum Information Theory

Driven Dissipative d-Wave Pairing of Atomic Fermions

Date: 
2010-07-20
Reference: 

S. Diehl, W. Yi, A. J. Daley, P. Zoller
http://arxiv.org/abs/1007.3420

We show how dissipative dynamics can give rise to pairing for two-component fermions on a lattice. In particular, we construct a "parent" Liouvillian operator so that a BCS-type state of a given symmetry, e.g. a d-wave state, is reached for arbitrary initial states in the absence of conservative forces. The system-bath couplings describe single-particle, number conserving and quasi-local processes. The pairing mechanism crucially relies on Fermi statistics.

Dynamical Phase Transitions and Instabilities in Open Atomic Many-Body Systems

Date: 
2010-07-01
Reference: 

S. Diehl, A. Tomadin, A. Micheli, R. Fazio, P. Zoller
Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 015702 (2010)

Many body physics from a quantum information perspective

Date: 
2010-03-16
Reference: 

R. Augusiak, F. M. Cucchietti, M. Lewenstein
http://arxiv.org/abs/1003.3153
to appear in the series Lecture Notes in Physics by Springer-Verlag, Lectures from the Les Houches School on "Modern theories of correlated electron systems"

The quantum information approach to many body physics has been very successful in giving new insight and novel numerical methods. In these lecture notes we take a vertical view of the subject, starting from general concepts and at each step delving into applications or consequences of a particular topic. We first review some general quantum information concepts like entanglement and entanglement measures, which leads us to entanglement area laws. We then continue with one of the most famous examples of area-law abiding states: matrix product states, and tensor product states in general.

Bose-Hubbard model with occupation dependent parameters

Date: 
2011-02-09
Author(s): 

O. Dutta, A. Eckardt, P. Hauke, B. Malomed, M. Lewenstein

Reference: 

New Journal Phys. 13 023019 (2011)

We study the ground-state properties of ultracold bosons in an optical lattice in the regime of strong interactions. The system is described by a non-standard Bose-Hubbard model with both occupation-dependent tunneling and on-site interaction parameters. We find that for sufficiently strong coupling, the system features a phase-transition from a Mott insulator with one particle per site to a superfluid of spatially extended particle pairs living on top of the Mott background.

The world's smallest fridge

Summary: 

Self-contained chiller can be built from just a few atoms

A group of researchers in the UK has shown that it is possible to build a refrigerator using just two quantum particles (or even just one) in order to cool another quantum particle. They believe that such a device could be exploited in nanotechnology and that versions of it may even exist in nature.

Full story available at physicsworld.com

Complete devil’s staircase and crystal–superfluid transitions in a dipolar XXZ spin chain: A trapped ion quantum simulation

Date: 
2010-11-19
Author(s): 

P. Hauke, F.M. Cucchietti, A. Müller-Hermes, M.C. Bañuls, J.I. Cirac, M. Lewenstein

Reference: 

New Journal Phys. 12 113037 (2010)

Systems with long-range interactions show a variety of intriguing properties: they typically accommodate many meta-stable states, they can give rise to spontaneous formation of supersolids, and they can lead to counterintuitive thermodynamic behavior. However, the increased complexity that comes with long-range interactions strongly hinders theoretical studies. This makes a quantum simulator for long-range models highly desirable.

Aspects of Entanglement in Quantum Many-Body Systems

Date: 
2009-03-24 - 2010-03-24
Reference: 

J. W. Clark, H. Habibian, A. D. Mandilara and M. L. Ristig
Foundation of Physics, DOI 10.1007/s10701-010-9467-6 (in press)

Knowledge of the entanglement properties of the wave functions commonly used to describe quantum many-particle systems can enhance our understanding of their correlation structure and provide new insights into quantum phase transitions that are observed experimentally or predicted theoretically.

Spontaneous nucleation of structural defects in inhomogeneous ion chains

Date: 
2010-06-30
Reference: 

A. del Campo, G. De Chiara, G. Morigi, M. B. Plenio and A. Retzker

Structural defects in ion crystals can be formed during a linear quench of the transverse trapping frequency across the mechanical instability from a linear chain to the zigzag structure. The density of defects after the sweep can be conveniently described by the Kibble-Zurek mechanism. In particular, the number of kinks in the zigzag ordering can be derived from a time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau equation for the order parameter, here the zigzag transverse size, under the assumption that the ions are continuously laser cooled.

Syndicate content