ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
In this review, we study some aspects of the non-equilibrium dynamics of quantum systems. In particular, we consider the effect of varying a parameter in the Hamiltonian of a quantum system which takes it across a quantum critical point or line. We study both sudden and slow quenches in a variety of systems including one-dimensional ultracold atoms in an optical lattice, an infinite range ferromagnetic Ising model, and some exactly solvable spin models in one and two dimensions (such as the Kitaev model). We show that quenching leads to the formation of defects whose density has a power-law dependence on the quenching rate; the power depends on the dimensionalities of the system and of the critical surface and on some of the exponents associated with the critical point which is being crossed. We also study the effect of non-linear quenching; the power law of the defects then depends on the degree of non-linearity. Finally, we study some spin-1/2 models to discuss how a qubit can be transferred across a system.
We study quantum transport after an inhomogeneous quantum quench in a free fermion lattice system in the presence of a localised defect. Using a new rigorous analytical approach for the calculation of large time and distance asymptotics of physical o
We provide systematic analysis on a non-Hermitian PT -symmetric quantum impurity system both in and out of equilibrium, based on exact computations. In order to understand the interplay between non-Hermiticity and Kondo physics, we focus on a prototy
Simulating the dynamics of a nonequilibrium quantum many-body system by computing the two-time Greens function associated with such a system is computationally challenging. However, we are often interested in the time diagonal of such a Greens functi
Equilibrium is a rather ideal situation, the exception rather than the rule in Nature. Whenever the external or internal parameters of a physical system are varied its subsequent relaxation to equilibrium may be either impossible or take very long ti
When a second-order phase transition is crossed at fine rate, the evolution of the system stops being adiabatic as a result of the critical slowing down in the neighborhood of the critical point. In systems with a topologically nontrivial vacuum mani