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91探花
Atomic and Laser Physics
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Prof Dieter Jaksch

Professor of Physics

Sub department

  • Atomic and Laser Physics

Research groups

  • Quantum systems engineering
Dieter.Jaksch@physics.ox.ac.uk
  • About
  • Publications

Parallel time-dependent variational principle algorithm for matrix product states

Physical Review B American Physical Society 101:23 (2020) 235123

Authors:

Paul Secular, Nikita Gourianov, Michael Lubasch, Sergey Dolgov, Stephen R Clark, Dieter Jaksch

Abstract:

Combining the time-dependent variational principle (TDVP) algorithm with the parallelization scheme introduced by Stoudenmire and White for the density matrix renormalization group (DMRG), we present the first parallel matrix product state (MPS) algorithm capable of time evolving one-dimensional (1D) quantum lattice systems with long-range interactions. We benchmark the accuracy and performance of the algorithm by simulating quenches in the long-range Ising and XY models. We show that our code scales well up to 32 processes, with parallel efficiencies as high as 86%. Finally, we calculate the dynamical correlation function of a 201-site Heisenberg XXX spin chain with 1/r2 interactions, which is challenging to compute sequentially. These results pave the way for the application of tensor networks to increasingly complex many-body systems.

A robust entangling gate for polar molecules using magnetic and microwave fields

Physical Review A American Physical Society 101:6 (2020) 062308

Authors:

Michael Hughes, Matthew D Frye, Rahul Sawant, Gaurav Bhole, Jonathan A Jones, Simon L Cornish, Mr Tarbutt, Jeremy M Hutson, Dieter Jaksch, Jordi Mur Petit

Abstract:

Polar molecules are an emerging platform for quantum technologies based on their long-range electric dipole鈥揹ipole interactions, which open new possibilities for quantum information processing and the quantum simulation of strongly correlated systems. Here, we use magnetic and microwave fields to design a fast entangling gate with > 0.999 fidelity and which is robust with respect to fluctuations in the trapping and control fields and to small thermal excitations. These results establish the feasibility to build a scalable quantum processor with a broad range of molecular species in optical-lattice and optical-tweezers setups.

Robust entangling gate for polar molecules using magnetic and microwave fields

PHYSICAL REVIEW A 101:6 (2020) 62308

Authors:

Michael Hughes, Matthew D Frye, Rahul Sawant, Gaurav Bhole, Jonathan A Jones, Simon L Cornish, Mr Tarbutt, Jeremy M Hutson, Dieter Jaksch, Jordi Mur-Petit

Abstract:

© 2020 American Physical Society. Polar molecules are an emerging platform for quantum technologies based on their long-range electric dipole-dipole interactions, which open new possibilities for quantum information processing and the quantum simulation of strongly correlated systems. Here, we use magnetic and microwave fields to design a fast entangling gate with >0.999 fidelity and which is robust with respect to fluctuations in the trapping and control fields and to small thermal excitations. These results establish the feasibility to build a scalable quantum processor with a broad range of molecular species in optical-lattice and optical-tweezers setups.

Controlling magnetic correlations in a driven Hubbard system far from half-filling

Physical Review A American Physical Society 101:5 (2020) 53634

Authors:

Hongmin Gao, Jonathan R Coulthard, Dieter Jaksch, Jordi Mur-Petit

Abstract:

We propose using ultracold fermionic atoms trapped in a periodically shaken optical lattice as a quantum simulator of the t鈭扟 Hamiltonian, which describes the dynamics in doped antiferromagnets and is thought to be relevant to the problem of high-temperature superconductivity in the cuprates. We show analytically that the effective Hamiltonian describing this system for off-resonant driving is the t鈭扟 model with additional pair hopping terms, whose parameters can all be controlled by the drive. We then demonstrate numerically using tensor network methods for a one-dimensional (1D) lattice that a slow modification of the driving strength allows near-adiabatic transfer of the system from the ground state of the underlying Hubbard model to the ground state of the effective t鈭扟 Hamiltonian. Finally, we report exact diagonalization calculations illustrating the control achievable on the dynamics of spin-singlet pairs in 2D lattices utilizing this technique with current cold-atom quantum-simulation technology. These results open new routes to explore the interplay between density and spin in strongly correlated fermionic systems through their out-of-equilibrium dynamics.

Stationary state degeneracy of open quantum systems with non-abelian symmetries

Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical IOP Publishing 53:21 (2020) 215304

Authors:

Zh Zhang, J Tindall, J Mur-Petit, D Jaksch, B Buca

Abstract:

We study the null space degeneracy of open quantum systems with multiple non-abelian, strong symmetries. By decomposing the Hilbert space representation of these symmetries into an irreducible representation involving the direct sum of multiple, commuting, invariant subspaces we derive a tight lower bound for the stationary state degeneracy. We apply these results within the context of open quantum many-body systems, presenting three illustrative examples: a fully-connected quantum network, the XXX Heisenberg model and the Hubbard model. We find that the derived bound, which scales at least cubically in the system size the SU(2) symmetric cases, is often saturated. Moreover, our work provides a theory for the systematic block-decomposition of a Liouvillian with non-abelian symmetries, reducing the computational difficulty involved in diagonalising these objects and exposing a natural, physical structure to the steady states鈥攚hich we observe in our examples.

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