ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Experimentally Probing Topological Order and Its Breakdown via Modular Matrices

109   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Zhihuang Luo
 تاريخ النشر 2016
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

The modern conception of phases of matter has undergone tremendous developments since the first observation of topologically ordered states in fractional quantum Hall systems in the 1980s. In this paper, we explore the question: How much detail of the physics of topological orders can in principle be observed using state of the art technologies? We find that using surprisingly little data, namely the toric code Hamiltonian in the presence of generic disorders and detuning from its exactly solvable point, the modular matrices -- characterizing anyonic statistics that are some of the most fundamental finger prints of topological orders -- can be reconstructed with very good accuracy solely by experimental means. This is a first experimental realization of these fundamental signatures of a topological order, a test of their robustness against perturbations, and a proof of principle -- that current technologies have attained the precision to identify phases of matter and, as such, probe an extended region of phase space around the soluble point before its breakdown. Given the special role of anyonic statistics in quantum computation, our work promises myriad applications both in probing and realistically harnessing these exotic phases of matter.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

We consider a topological Hamiltonian and establish a correspondence between its eigenstates and the resource for a causal order game introduced in Ref. [1], known as process matrix. We show that quantum correlations generated in the quantum many-bod y energy eigenstates of the model can mimic the statistics that can be obtained by exploiting different quantum measurements on the process matrix of the game. This provides an interpretation of the expectation values of the observables computed for the quantum many-body states in terms of success probabilities of the game. As a result, we show that the ground state of the model can be related to the optimal strategy of the causal order game. Along with this, we show that a correspondence between the considered topological quantum Hamiltonian and the causal order game can also be made by relating the behavior of topological order parameters characterizing different phases of the model with the different regions of the causal order game.
We determine the conditions under which topological order survives a rapid quantum quench. Specifically, we consider the case where a quantum spin system is prepared in the ground state of the Toric Code Model and, after the quench, it evolves with a Hamiltonian that does not support topological order. We provide analytical results supported by numerical evidence for a variety of quench Hamiltonians. The robustness of topological order under non-equilibrium situations is tested by studying the topological entropy and a novel dynamical measure, which makes use of the similarity between partial density matrices obtained from different topological sectors.
We study the Kitaev-Ising model, where ferromagnetic Ising interactions are added to the Kitaev model on a lattice. This model has two phases which are characterized by topological and ferromagnetic order. Transitions between these two kinds of order are then studied on a quasi-one dimensional system, a ladder, and on a two dimensional periodic lattice, a torus. By exactly mapping the quasi-one dimensional case to an anisotropic XY chain we show that the transition occurs at zero $lambda$ where $lambda$ is the strength of the ferromagnetic coupling. In the two dimensional case the model is mapped to a 2D Ising model in transverse field, where it shows a transition at finite value of $lambda$. A mean field treatment reveals the qualitative character of the transition and an approximate value for the transition point. Furthermore with perturbative calculation, we show that expectation value of Wilson loops behave as expected in the topological and ferromagnetic phases.
343 - M.X. Huo , Ying Li , Z. Song 2008
The alternating-current (AC) Josephson effect is studied in a system consisting of two weakly coupled Bose Hubbard models. In the framework of the mean field theory, Gross-Pitaevskii equations show that the amplitude of the Josephson current is propo rtional to the product of superfluid order parameters. In addition, the chemical potential--current relation for a small size system is obtained via the exact numerical computation. This allows us to propose a feasible experimental scheme to measure the Mott lobes of the quantum phase transition.
The properties of topological systems are inherently tied to their dimensionality. Higher-dimensional physical systems exhibit topological properties not shared by their lower dimensional counterparts and, in general, offer richer physics. One exampl e is a d-dimensional quantized multipole topological insulator, which supports multipoles of order up to 2^d and a hierarchy of gapped boundary modes with topological 0-D corner modes at the top. While multipole topological insulators have been successfully realized in electromagnetic and mechanical 2D systems with quadrupole polarization, and a 3D octupole topological insulator was recently demonstrated in acoustics, going beyond the three physical dimensions of space is an intriguing and challenging task. In this work, we apply dimensional reduction to map a 4D higher-order topological insulator (HOTI) onto an equivalent aperiodic 1D array sharing the same spectrum, and emulate in this system the properties of a hexadecapole topological insulator. We observe the 1D counterpart of zero-energy states localized at 4D HOTI corners - the hallmark of multipole topological phase. Interestingly, the dimensional reduction guarantees that one of the 4D corner states remains localized to the edge of the 1D array, while all other localize in the bulk and retain their zero-energy eigenvalues. This discovery opens new directions in multi-dimensional topological physics arising in lower-dimensional aperiodic systems, and it unveils highly unusual resonances protected by topological properties inherited from higher dimensions.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا