Spelling suggestions: "subject:"may body systems""
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Quantum Magnetism, Nonequilibrium Dynamics and Quantum Simulation of Correlated Quantum SystemsManmana, Salvatore Rosario 03 June 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Strong interactions in alkaline-earth Rydberg ensemblesMukherjee, Rick 17 December 2014 (has links) (PDF)
Ultra-cold atoms in optical lattices provide a versatile and robust platform to study fundamental condensed-matter physics problems and have applications in quantum optics as well as quantum information processing. For many of these applications, Rydberg atoms (atoms excited to large principal quantum numbers) are ideal due to its long coherence times and strong interactions.
However, one of the pre-requisite for such applications is identical confinement of ground state atoms with Rydberg atoms. This is challenging for conventionally used alkali atoms. In this thesis, I discuss the potential of using alkaline-earth Rydberg atoms for many-body physics by implementing simultaneous trapping for the relevant internal states. In particular, I consider a scheme for generating multi-particle entanglement and explore charge transport in a one dimensional atomic lattice.
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Symétrie et brisure de symétrie pour certains problèmes non linéaires / Symmetry and symmetry breaking for some nonlinear problemsRicaud, Julien 08 June 2017 (has links)
Cette thèse est consacrée à l'étude mathématique de deux systèmes quantiques décrits par des modèles non linéaires : le polaron anisotrope et les électrons d'un cristal périodique. Après avoir prouvé l'existence de minimiseurs, nous nous intéressons à la question de l'unicité pour chacun des deux modèles. Dans une première partie, nous montrons l'unicité du minimiseur et sa non-dégénérescence pour le polaron décrit par l'équation de Choquard--Pekar anisotrope, sous la condition que la matrice diélectrique du milieu est presque isotrope. Dans le cas d'une forte anisotropie, nous laissons la question de l'unicité en suspens mais caractérisons précisément les symétries pouvant être dégénérées. Dans une seconde partie, nous étudions les électrons d'un cristal dans le modèle de Thomas--Fermi--Dirac--Von~Weizsäcker périodique, en faisant varier le paramètre devant le terme de Dirac. Nous montrons l'unicité et la non-dégénérescence du minimiseur lorsque ce paramètre est suffisamment petit et mettons en évidence une brisure de symétrie lorsque celui-ci est grand. / This thesis is devoted to the mathematical study of two quantum systems described by nonlinear models: the anisotropic polaron and the electrons in a periodic crystal. We first prove the existence of minimizers, and then discuss the question of uniqueness for both problems. In the first part, we show the uniqueness and nondegeneracy of the minimizer for the polaron, described by the Choquard--Pekar anisotropic equation, assuming that the dielectric matrix of the medium is almost isotropic. In the strong anisotropic setting, we leave the question of uniqueness open but identify the symmetry that can possibly be degenerate. In the second part, we study the electrons of a crystal in the periodic Thomas--Fermi--Dirac--Von~Weizsäcker model, varying the parameter in front of the Dirac term. We show uniqueness and nondegeneracy of the minimizer when this parameter is small enough et prove the occurrence of symmetry breaking when it is large.
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Strongly correlated systems of bosons and fermions : a diagrammatic, variational and path integral Monte Carlo study / Systèmes fortement corrélés de bosons et fermions : une étude Monte Carlo diagrammatique, variationnelle et intégrale de CheminAngelone, Adriano 19 September 2017 (has links)
Mon travail de thèse se concentre sur l'étude, à l'aide de techniques numériques, de systèmes de fermions et bosons fortement corrélés. J'étudie Hamiltoniens de bosons sur réseau avec interactions à portée étendue, avant un intérêt pour expériences concernant atomes en états Rydberg-dressed, par moyen de simulations Path Integral Monte Carlo. Mon résultat principal est la démonstration d'un état de superverre en absence de sources de frustration dans le système.J'étudie également la modèle t-J fermionique avec deux trous par moyen de simulationsVariational Monte Carlo avec l’ansatz Entangled Plaquette States (EPS). Mon étude est fondamental en la perspective d'appliquer l'ansatz EPS à autres systèmes fermioniques, d’intérêt pour la supraconductivité à haute temperature, dont le comportement n'a pas encore été déterminé. Finalement, je présente mon travail sur une implémentation de l'algorithme Diagrammatic Monte Carlo. / The focus of my thesis is the investigation, via numerical approaches, of strongly correlated models of bosons and fermions. I study bosonic lattice Hamiltonians with extended--range interactions, of interest for experiments with cold Rydberg-dressed atoms, via Path Integral MonteCarlo simulations. My main result is the demonstration of a superglass in the absence of frustration sources in the system. I also study the fermionic $t-J$ model in the presence of two holes via Variational Monte Carlo with the Entangled Plaquette States Ansatz. My study is foundational to the extension of this approach to other fermionic systems, of interest for high temperature superconductivity, where the physical picture is still under debate (such as, e.g., the $t-J$ model in the case of finite hole concentration). Finally, I discuss my work on an implementation of the Diagrammatic Monte Carlo algorithm.
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Prekursory fázových přechodů v kvantových systémech / Precursors of phase transitions in quantum systemsDvořák, Martin January 2015 (has links)
In this diploma thesis precursors of quantum phase transitions in finite many-body systems are studied. The main attention is paid to the mechanism, how nonanalytic behaviour of the ground state is generated for certain critical values of real control parameters. It is shown that nonanalytic behaviour of energy levels and eigenstates is closely connected with exceptional points of the hamiltonian, which are points in control parameter space extended into a complex domain where at least two eigenvalues and corresponding eigenvectors coincide. Differences in the distribution of exceptional points in the complex plane of control parameter for the first and second order phase transitions and also evolutions of the position of exceptional points with increasing particle number are discussed.
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Un nouveau dispositif pour étudier la relaxation d'un système quantique à N corps / A new ultracold atom apparatus for investigating the relaxation dynamics of quantum many-body systemsMolineri, Anaïs 06 November 2019 (has links)
Les travaux présentés dans ce manuscrit de thèse portent sur la construction d'une nouvelle expérience d'atomes froids de strontium 84, depuis ses balbutiements jusqu'à l'obtention des pièges magnéto-optiques sur la raie large à 461 nm, puis sur la raie étroite à 689 nm.Les études menées avec cette expérience porteront sur la dynamique de relaxation de gaz quantiques placés initialement en situation hors-équilibre. Pour réaliser de telles expériences, un microscope à atomes sera mis en place prochainement et permettra de mesurer des fonctions de corrélations spatiales à partir de la répartition des atomes dans le piège optique bidimensionnel. C'est pourquoi, en parallèle du montage, des travaux ont été réalisés pour mettre au point un algorithme de reconstruction, indispensable au traitement des futures images obtenues par ce microscope. Ce manuscrit de thèse a pour objectif de détailler et justifier aussi précisément que possible les choix expérimentaux qui ont été effectués et de présenter le stade actuel d'avancement de l'algorithme de reconstruction d'images. Il reste encore quelques étapes de construction avant que le dispositif expérimental soit achevé: ajouter une chambre dans laquelle les mesures auront lieu, mettre en place le système d'imagerie et monter le système optique qui permettra de transporter les atomes entre les chambres à vide, les confiner dans un plan, d'effectuer la transition vers un condensat de Bose-Einstein et enfin les soumettre à un réseau optique bidimensionnel. / This manuscript presents the first steps of a new ultracold atoms experiment using strontium 84. The aim of this experiment is to study the relaxation dynamics of quantum gases initially prepared in an out-of-equilibrium state. This experiment will include a quantum gas microscope, allowing us to measure spatial correlation functions in two-dimensionnal systems. The current state of the construction allows us to generate both magneto-optical trap of strontium: along its wide transition at 461 nm and its narrow transition at 689 nm. Concurrently with the experimental setup, we carried out works on a reconstruction algorithm required for the future data processing of the microscope images. This manuscript details experimental aspects, justifying their choices, and presents the current state of work on the reconstruction algorithm. There are still steps to complete the experimental setup: add a chamber where we will make the measurements to the vaccuum system, set up the quantum gaz microscope and all the required optics to transport the atomic clouds between two vaccuum chambers, to reach Bose-Einstein condensation and to confine the atoms in two-dimensionnal optical traps.
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Strong interactions in alkaline-earth Rydberg ensemblesMukherjee, Rick 20 October 2014 (has links)
Ultra-cold atoms in optical lattices provide a versatile and robust platform to study fundamental condensed-matter physics problems and have applications in quantum optics as well as quantum information processing. For many of these applications, Rydberg atoms (atoms excited to large principal quantum numbers) are ideal due to its long coherence times and strong interactions.
However, one of the pre-requisite for such applications is identical confinement of ground state atoms with Rydberg atoms. This is challenging for conventionally used alkali atoms. In this thesis, I discuss the potential of using alkaline-earth Rydberg atoms for many-body physics by implementing simultaneous trapping for the relevant internal states. In particular, I consider a scheme for generating multi-particle entanglement and explore charge transport in a one dimensional atomic lattice.
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Topics in Cold Atoms Related to Quantum Information Processing and A Machine Learning Approach to Condensed Matter PhysicsWu, Jiaxin 17 October 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Data driven approach to detection of quantum phase transitionsContessi, Daniele 19 July 2023 (has links)
Phase transitions are fundamental phenomena in (quantum) many-body systems. They are associated with changes in the macroscopic physical properties of the system in response to the alteration in the conditions controlled by one or more parameters, like temperature or coupling constants. Quantum phase transitions are particularly intriguing as they reveal new insights into the fundamental nature of matter and the laws of physics. The study of phase transitions in such systems is crucial in aiding our understanding of how materials behave in extreme conditions, which are difficult to replicate in laboratory, and also the behavior of exotic states of matter with unique and potentially useful properties like superconductors and superfluids. Moreover, this understanding has other practical applications and can lead to the development of new materials with specific properties or more efficient technologies, such as quantum computers. Hence, detecting the transition point from one phase of matter to another and constructing the corresponding phase diagram is of great importance for examining many-body systems and predicting their response to external perturbations. Traditionally, phase transitions have been identified either through analytical methods like mean field theory or numerical simulations. The pinpointing of the critical value normally involves the measure of specific quantities such as local observables, correlation functions, energy gaps, etc. reflecting the changes in the physics through the transition. However, the latter approach requires prior knowledge of the system to calculate the order parameter of the transition, which is uniquely associated to its universality class. Recently, another method has gained more and more attention in the physics community. By using raw and very general representative data of the system, one can resort to machine learning techniques to distinguish among patterns within the data belonging to different phases. The relevance of these techniques is rooted in the ability of a properly trained machine to efficiently process complex data for the sake of pursuing classification tasks, pattern recognition, generating brand new data and even developing decision processes. The aim of this thesis is to explore phase transitions from this new and promising data-centric perspective. On the one hand, our work is focused on the developement of new machine learning architectures using state-of-the-art and interpretable models. On the other hand, we are interested in the study of the various possible data which can be fed to the artificial intelligence model for the mapping of a quantum many-body system phase diagram. Our analysis is supported by numerical examples obtained via matrix-product-states (MPS) simulations for several one-dimensional zero-temperature systems on a lattice such as the XXZ model, the Extended Bose-Hubbard model (EBH) and the two-species Bose Hubbard model (BH2S). In Part I, we provide a general introduction to the background concepts for the understanding of the physics and the numerical methods used for the simulations and the analysis with deep learning. In Part II, we first present the models of the quantum many-body systems that we study. Then, we discuss the machine learning protocol to identify phase transitions, namely anomaly detection technique, that involves the training of a model on a dataset of normal behavior and use it to recognize deviations from this behavior on test data. The latter can be applied for our purpose by training in a known phase so that, at test-time, all the other phases of the system are marked as anomalies. Our method is based on Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) and improves the networks adopted by the previous works in the literature for the anomaly detection scheme taking advantage of the adversarial training procedure. Specifically, we train the GAN on a dataset composed of bipartite entanglement spectra (ES) obtained from Tensor Network simulations for the three aforementioned quantum systems. We focus our study on the detection of the elusive Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless (BKT) transition that have been object of intense theoretical and experimental studies since its first prediction for the classical two-dimensional XY model. The absence of an explicit symmetry breaking and its gappless-to-gapped nature which characterize such a transition make the latter very subtle to be detected, hence providing a challenging testing ground for the machine-driven method. We train the GAN architecture on the ES data in the gapless side of BKT transition and we show that the GAN is able to automatically distinguish between data from the same phase and beyond the BKT. The protocol that we develop is not supposed to become a substitute to the traditional methods for the phase transitions detection but allows to obtain a qualitative map of a phase diagram with almost no prior knowledge about the nature and the arrangement of the phases -- in this sense we refer to it as agnostic -- in an automatic fashion. Furthermore, it is very general and it can be applied in principle to all kind of representative data of the system coming both from experiments and numerics, as long as they have different patterns (even hidden to the eye) in different phases. Since the kind of data is crucially linked with the success of the detection, together with the ES we investigate another candidate: the probability density function (PDF) of a globally U(1) conserved charge in an extensive sub-portion of the system. The full PDF is one of the possible reductions of the ES which is known to exhibit relations and degeneracies reflecting very peculiar aspects of the physics and the symmetries of the system. Its patterns are often used to tell different kinds of phases apart and embed information about non-local quantum correlations. However, the PDF is measurable, e.g. in quantum gas microscopes experiments, and it is quite general so that it can be considered not only in the cases of the study but also in other systems with different symmetries and dimensionalities. Both the ES and the PDF can be extracted from the simulation of the ground state by dividing the one-dimensional chain into two complementary subportions. For the EBH we calculate the PDF of the bosonic occupation number in a wide range of values of the couplings and we are able to reproduce the very rich phase diagram containing several phases (superfluid, Mott insulator, charge density wave, phase separation of supersolid and superfluid and the topological Haldane insulator) just with an educated gaussian fit of the PDF. Even without resorting to machine learning, this analysis is instrumental to show the importance of the experimentally accessible PDF for the task. Moreover, we highlight some of its properties according to the gapless and gapped nature of the ground state which require a further investigation and extension beyond zero-temperature regimes and one-dimensional systems. The last chapter of the results contains the description of another architecture, namely the Concrete Autoencoder (CAE) which can be used for detecting phase transitions with the anomaly detection scheme while being able to automatically learn what the most relevant components of the input data are. We show that the CAE can recognize the important eigenvalues out of the entire ES for the EBH model in order to characterize the gapless phase. Therefore the latter architecture can be used to provide not only a more compact version of the input data (dimensionality reduction) -- which can improve the training -- but also some meaningful insights in the spirit of machine learning interpretability. In conclusion, in this thesis we describe two advances in the solution to the problem of phase recognition in quantum many-body systems. On one side, we improve the literature standard anomaly detection protocol for an automatic and agnostic identification of the phases by employing the GAN network. Moreover, we implement and test an explainable model which can make the interpretation of the results easier. On the other side we put the focus on the PDF as a new candidate quantity for the scope of discerning phases of matter. We show that it contains a lot of information about the many-body state being very general and experimentally accessible.
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Digital Quantum Computing for Many-Body SimulationsAmitrano, Valentina 13 December 2023 (has links)
Abstract Iris
The power of quantum computing lies in its ability to perform certain calculations and solve complex problems exponentially faster than classical computers. This potential has profound implications for a wide range of fields, including particle physics. This thesis lays a fundamental foundation for understanding quantum computing. Particular emphasis is placed on the intricate process of quantum gate decomposition, an elementary lynchpin that underpins the development of quantum algorithms and plays a crucial role in this research. In particular, this concerns the implementation of quantum algorithms designed to simulate the dynamic evolution of multi-particle quantum systems - so-called Hamiltonian simulations.
The concept of quantum gate decomposition is introduced and linked to quantum circuit optimisation.
The decomposition of quantum gates plays a crucial role in fault-tolerant quantum computing in the sense that an optimal implementation of a quantum gate is essential to efficiently perform a quantum simulation, especially for near-term quantum computers.
Part of this thesis aims to propose a new explicit tensorial notation of quantum computing.
Two notations are commonly used in the literature. The first is the Dirac notation and the other standard formalism is based on the so-called computational basis. The main disadvantage of the latter is the exponential growth of vector and matrix dimensions and the fact that it hides some relevant quantum properties of the operations by increasing the apparent number of independent variables. A third possible notation is introduced here, which describes qubit states as tensors and quantum gates as multilinear or quasi-multilinear maps. Some advantages for the detection of separable and entangled systems and for measurement techniques are also shown.
Finally, this thesis demonstrates the advantage of quantum computing in the description of multi-particle quantum systems by proposing a quantum algorithm to simulate collective neutrino oscillations. Collective flavour oscillations of neutrinos due to forward neutrino-neutrino scattering provide an intriguing many-body system for time evolution simulations on a quantum computer. These phenomena are of particular interest in extreme astrophysical settings such as core-collapse supernovae, neutron star mergers and the early universe.
A detailed description of the physical phenomena and environments in which collective flavor oscillations occur is first reported, and the derivation of the Hamiltonian governing the evolution of flavor oscillations is detailed. The aim is to reproduce this evolution using a quantum algorithm. To manage the computational complexity, we use the Trotter approximation of the time evolution operator, which mitigates the exponential growth of circuit complexity.
The quantum algorithm was designed to work on a trapped-ion based testbed (the theory of which is presented in detail). After machine-aware optimisation, the quantum circuit implementing the algorithm was run on the real quantum machine 'Quantinuum', and the results are presented and discussed.
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