Szemináriumok
Bell nonlocality is not sufficient for the security of standard device-independent quantum key distribution protocols
Reference: M. Farkas et al., https://arxiv.org/abs/2103.02639
Time dependent electric transport in nodal loop semimetals
Close to the Fermi energy, nodal loop semimetals have a torus-shaped, strongly anisotropic Fermi surface which affects their transport properties. Here we investigate the non-equilibrium dynamics of nodal loop semimetals by going beyond linear response and determine the time evolution of the current after switching on a homogeneous electric field. The current grows monotonically with time for electric fields perpendicular to the nodal loop plane, however, it exhibits non-monotonical behavior for field orientations aligned within the plane. After an initial non-universal growth ~Et, the current first reaches a plateau ~E. Then, for perpendicular directions, it increases while for in-plane directions it decreases with time to another plateau, still ~E. These features arise from interband processes. For long times or strong electric fields, the current grows as ~E^(3/2)t or ~E^3t^2 for perpendicular or parallel electric fields, respectively. This non-linear response represents an intraband effect where the large number of excited quasiparticles responds to the electric field. Our analytical results are benchmarked by the numerical evaluation of the current from continuum and tight-binding models of nodal loop semimetals.
Excitons in twisted flatland
Atomically thin transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) have attracted recent interest due to their unique excitonic properties. Lateral confinement of excitons to generate two-dimensional exciton arrays may open up new avenues for quantum optoelectronics such as topological photonics and quantum emitter arrays. Realizing such emitter arrays, however, requires the development of new methods to engineer the excitonic energy landscape at the nanoscale. In this talk, I will focus on how to use twisted TMD bilayers to engineer the coherence and relaxation properties of excitons. I will discuss lattice reconstruction effects in the moiré pattern and correlating their importance in determining the excitonic behaviors. Finally I will discuss prospects of realizing tunable exciton arrays in twisted heterostructures for exploring novel optoelectronics and many-body states.
Dynamically corrected gates from geometric space curves
Reference & Abstract: https://arxiv.org/abs/2103.16015