Jul+2017

= Jul 1-Jul 10 Biao Huang, Jul 11-Jul 20 Haiyuan Zou, Jul 21-Jul 30 Zehan Li =

= Jul 18 = [|arXiv:1707.05051] [ [|pdf], [|ps] , [|other] ] Dynamics of quantum information in many-body localized systems [|M. C. Bañuls], [|N. Y. Yao] , [|S. Choi] , [|M. D. Lukin] , [|J. I. Cirac]   Comments: 10 pages, 7 figures  Subjects: Disordered Systems and Neural Networks (cond-mat.dis-nn) ; Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech); Quantum Physics (quant-ph) We characterize the information dynamics of strongly disordered systems using a combination of analytics, exact diagonalization, and matrix product operator simulations. More specifically, we study the spreading of quantum information in three different scenarios: thermalizing, Anderson localized, and many-body localized. We qualitatively distinguish these cases by quantifying the amount of remnant information in a local region. The nature of the dynamics is further explored by computing the propagation of mutual information with respect to varying partitions. Finally, we demonstrate that classical simulability, as captured by the magnitude of MPO truncation errors, exhibits enhanced fluctuations near the localization transition, suggesting the possibility of its use as a diagnostic of the critical point.

= Jul 17 = [|arXiv:1707.04344] (cross-list from quant-ph) [ [|pdf], [|other] ] Probing many-body dynamics on a 51-atom quantum simulator [|Hannes Bernien], [|Sylvain Schwartz] , [|Alexander Keesling] , [|Harry Levine] , [|Ahmed Omran] , [|Hannes Pichler] , [|Soonwon Choi] , [|Alexander S. Zibrov] , [|Manuel Endres] , [|Markus Greiner] , [|Vladan Vuletić] , [|Mikhail D. Lukin]   Comments: 17 pages, 13 figures  Subjects: Quantum Physics (quant-ph) ; Quantum Gases (cond-mat.quant-gas); Atomic Physics (physics.atom-ph) Controllable, coherent many-body systems provide unique insights into fundamental properties of quantum matter, allow for the realization of novel quantum phases, and may ultimately lead to computational systems that are exponentially superior to existing classical approaches. Here, we demonstrate a novel platform for the creation of controlled many-body quantum matter. Our approach makes use of deterministically prepared, reconfigurable arrays of individually controlled, cold atoms. Strong, coherent interactions are enabled by coupling to atomic Rydberg states. We realize a programmable Ising-type quantum spin model with tunable interactions and system sizes of up to 51 qubits. Within this model we observe transitions into ordered states (Rydberg crystals) that break various discrete symmetries, verify high-fidelity preparation of ordered states, and investigate dynamics across the phase transition in large arrays of atoms. In particular, we observe a novel type of robust many-body dynamics corresponding to persistent oscillations of crystalline order after a sudden quantum quench. These observations enable new approaches for exploring many-body phenomena and open the door for realizations of novel quantum algorithms.

= Jul 14 = [|arXiv:1707.04123] [ [|pdf], [|ps] , [|other] ] A cavity-induced artificial gauge field in a Bose-Hubbard ladder [|Catalin-Mihai Halati], [|Ameneh Sheikhan] , [|Corinna Kollath]   Subjects: Quantum Gases (cond-mat.quant-gas)   We consider theoretically ultracold interacting bosonic atoms confined to quasi-one-dimensional ladder structures formed by optical lattices and coupled to the field of an optical cavity. The atoms can collect a spatial phase imprint during a cavity-assisted tunneling along a rung via Raman transitions employing a cavity mode and a transverse running wave pump beam. By adiabatic elimination of the cavity field we obtain an effective Hamiltonian for the bosonic atoms, with a self-consistency condition. Using the numerical density matrix renormalization group method, we obtain a rich steady state diagram of self-organized steady states. Transitions between superfluid to Mott-insulating states occur, on top of which we can have Meissner, vortex liquid, and vortex lattice phases. Also a state that explicitly breaks the symmetry between the two legs of the ladder, namely the biased-ladder phase is dynamically stabilized.

= Jul 11 =

[|arXiv:1707.02379] [ [|pdf], [|other] ] Interaction-induced exotic vortex states in an optical lattice clock with spin-orbit coupling [|Xiaofan Zhou], [|Jian-Song Pan] , [|Wei Yi] , [|Gang Chen] , [|Suotang Jia]   Subjects: Quantum Gases (cond-mat.quant-gas) ; Strongly Correlated Electrons (cond-mat.str-el) Motivated by a recent experiment [L. F. Livi, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 117, 220401(2016)], we study the ground-state properties of interacting fermions in a one-dimensional optical lattice clock with spin-orbit coupling. As the electronic and the hyperfine-spin states in the clock-state manifolds can be treated as effective sites along distinct synthetic dimensions, the system can be considered as multiple two-leg ladders with uniform magnetic flux penetrating the plaquettes of each ladder. As the inter-orbital spin-exchange interactions in the clock-state manifolds couple individual ladders together, we show that exotic interaction-induced vortex states emerge in the coupled-ladder system, which compete with existing phases of decoupled ladders and lead to a rich phase diagram. Adopting the density matrix renormalization group approach, we map out the phase diagram, and investigate in detail the currents and the density-density correlations of the various phases. Our results reveal the impact of interactions on spin-orbit coupled systems, and are particularly relevant to the on-going exploration of spin-orbit coupled optical lattice clocks.