Szemináriumok

The Kibble-Zurek scaling at exceptional points

Időpont: 
2019. 10. 18. 10:15
Hely: 
Building F, stairway III., seminar room of the Dept. of Theoretical Physics
Előadó: 
Balázs Dóra (BME)

Exceptional points (EPs) are ubiquitous in non-hermitian systems, and represent the complex counterpart of  critical points. By driving a system through a critical point at finite rate induces defects, described by the Kibble-Zurek mechanism, which finds applications in diverse fields of physics. Here we generalize this to a ramp across an EP. We find that  adiabatic time evolution brings the system into an eigenstate of the final non-hermitian Hamiltonian and demonstrate that for a variety of drives through an EP, the defect density obeys a universal scaling form in terms of the usual critical exponents and the speed of the drive. Defect production is suppressed compared to the conventional hermitian case as the defect state can decay back to the ground state close to the EP.

Spin Spiral Surfaces in Heisenberg Magnets

Időpont: 
2019. 10. 25. 10:15
Hely: 
Building F, stairway III., seminar room of the Dept. of Theoretical Physics
Előadó: 
Péter Balla (Wigner)

Title: "Spin Spiral Surfaces in Heisenberg Magnets: Explicit constructions of models with ground state degeneracy"

 

Abstract: "Frustration in classical spin models can lead to degenerate ground states without long-range order. In reciprocal space, these degeneracies appear as manifolds of wave vectors, their dimensionality increasing with the degree of frustration and the robustness of the disordered spin-liquid state. Here, we present a recipe to explicitly construct Heisenberg models on Bravais lattices with codimension-one manifolds, i.e., lines in two dimensions and surfaces with different Euler characteristics in three dimensions. Furthermore, we discuss the role of thermal and quantum fluctuations in stabilizing ordered states."

 

Based on: P Balla, Y Iqbal, K Penc, Phys. Rev. B 100, 140402(R) (2019)

Superfluid weight and polarization amplitude in the bosonic Hubbard model

Időpont: 
2019. 10. 28. 14:00
Hely: 
Building F, stairway III., seminar room of the Dept. of Theoretical Physics
Előadó: 
Balázs Hetényi (Bilkent & BME)

Title: "Superfluid weight and polarization amplitude in the one-dimensional bosonic Hubbard model"

 

Abstract: "We calculate the superfluid weight and the polarization amplitude for the one-dimensional bosonic Hubbard model focusing on the strong-coupling regime. Other than analytic calculations we apply two methods: variational Monte Carlo based on the Baeriswyl wave function and exact diagonalization. The former gives zero superfluid response at integer filling, while the latter gives a superfluid response at finite hopping. From the polarization amplitude we derive the variance and the associated size scaling exponent. Again, the variational study does not produce a finite superfluid weight at integer filling (size scaling exponent is near one), but the Fourier transform of the polarization amplitude behaves in a similar way to the result of exact diagonalization, with a peak at small hopping, and suddenly decreasing at the insulator-superfluid transition. On the other hand, exact diagonalization studies result in a finite spread of the total position which increases with the size of the system. In the superfluid phase the size scaling exponent is two as expected. Importantly, our work addresses the ambiguities that arise in the calculation of the superfluid weight in variational calculations, and we comment on the prediction of Anderson about the superfluid response of the model at integer filling."

Experimental particle physics with Pomerons

Időpont: 
2019. 11. 05. 14:30
Hely: 
Building F, stairway III., 2nd floor, room F3213
Előadó: 
Ferenc Siklér (Wigner RC)

Years after the discovery of the Higgs boson, the Large Hadron Collider and its detector systems still provide a huge amount of data with unprecedented quality. It enables us to revisit some corners of phase-phase, e.g. those where the predictions of perturbative quantum chromodynamics (the theory of strong interactions) have not been conclusively observed yet. In the talk, I will present an ongoing study of very low multiplicity proton-proton collisions, the created resonances and their spin structure, to give an insight to the beauty of data analysis.

High sensitivity quantum-limited electron spin resonance

Időpont: 
2019. 11. 07. 10:00
Hely: 
Building F, stairway I., seminar room of the Dept. of Physics
Előadó: 
Vishal Ranjan (Saclay)

In a conventional electron spin resonance (ESR) spectrometer based on the inductive detection method, the paramagnetic spins precess in an external magnetic field B0 radiating weak microwave signals into a resonant cavity which are subsequently amplified and measured. Despite its widespread use, ESR spectroscopy has limited sensitivity, and large amounts of spins are necessary to accumulate sufficient signal. Most conventional ESR spectrometers operate at room temperature and employ three-dimensional cavities. At X-band, they require approximately 10^13 spins to obtain sufficient signal in a single echo [1]. Enhancing this sensitivity to smaller spin ensembles and eventually the single spin limit is highly desirable.

 

Exploiting recent progress in circuit-quantum electrodynamics, we have combined high quality factor superconducting micro-resonators and noise-less Josephson Parametric Amplifiers to perform ESR spectroscopy at millikelvin temperatures, reaching a new regime where the sensitivity is limited by the quantum fluctuations of the microwave field. Quantum fluctuations of the field also affect directly the spin dynamics via Purcell effect : spin relaxation occurs dominantly by spontaneous emissions of microwave photons. Based on these principles [2-4], we first show an unprecedented measurement sensitivity of 10 spins/sqrt(Hz) for unit SNR in an inductive-detection ESR with an ensemble of Bismuth donors in Silicon [5]. This high sensitivity enables us to characterize the coherence properties of an ensemble of donors in close proximity ( 50- 100 nm) to the silicon surface, with spatial resolution. We identify surface magnetic and electric noise as the main decoherence sources in our device. At the so-called "clock transition", the coherence time approaches 1s, which is the longest reported for an electron spin close to a surface [6].

 

[1] A. Schweiger and G. Jeschke, Principles of pulse electron paramagnetic resonance (Oxford University Press, 2001).
[2] P. Haikka, Y. Kubo, A. Bienfait, P. Bertet, K. Moelmer, Phys. Rev. A 95, 022306 (2017).
[3] A. Bienfait, J. Pla, Y. Kubo, M. Stern, X. Zhou, C.C. Lo,C.Weis, T. Schenkel, M. Thewalt, D. Vion, D. Esteve, B. Julsgaard, K. Moelmer, J. Morton, and P. Bertet, Nature Nanotechnology 11, 253 (2015).
[4] S. Probst, A. Bienfait, P. Campagne-Ibarcq, J. J. Pla, B. Albanese, J. F. Da SilvaBarbosa, T. Schenkel, D. Vion, D. Esteve, K. Moelmer, J. J. L. Morton, R. Heeres, P.Bertet, Appl. Phys. Lett. 111, 202604 (2017)
[5] V. Ranjan et. al., in preparation (2019)
[6] V. Ranjan et. al., in preparation (2019)

Group coordination, decision-making and collective sensing

Időpont: 
2019. 11. 08. 10:15
Hely: 
Building F, stairway III., seminar room of the Dept. of Theoretical Physics
Előadó: 
Máté Nagy (Konstanz/ELTE)

Full title: "Group coordination, decision-making and collective sensing – and a new Lendület research group"

 

Abstract: "Recent technological developments allow studying group behaviour in unprecedented details and on a variety of spatial and temporal scales. New analytical methods and quantitative tools support the understanding of the huge datasets produced by these measurements, providing an insight and fascinating results related to group coordination, decision-making and collective sensing in groups of pigeons, rats, dogs, storks and humans.
I will also outline my plans and the line of research of the Collective Behaviour Lendület Research Group which will start in December 2019. The research will mainly, but not exclusively concentrate on collective migration and more specifically, the collective thermal soaring of birds. Our goals are to get biological insight into the collective aspects of wild birds’ thermalling by using high resolution measurements from autonomous soaring drone(s) flying near them. We are aiming for a realization of highly efficient autonomous bio-inspired thermalling drones, which will have  enormous potential in applications (wildlife monitoring, search and rescue, etc.)."

Efficiently readable codes through humble nonlinearities

Időpont: 
2019. 11. 15. 10:15
Hely: 
Building F, stairway III., seminar room of the Dept. of Theoretical Physics
Előadó: 
Gergő Orbán (Wigner)

A remarkable parallel between artificial and biological learning systems is that both feature an elementary nonlinearity, the firing threshold: the linear response of a unit (an artificial or a biological neuron) is fed through a firing rate nonlinearity, which clips the response of the unit under a certain threshold. We discuss insights obtained from neuroscience why this humble nonlinearity is effective in supporting cutting-edge performance in applications ranging from scientific image analysis to multi-billion dollar commercial applications. We approach this question from an appealing idea that is phrased in neuroscience as representational untangling: the idea that high dimensional signals that are hopelessly nonlinearly entangled become linearly separable through computational processes. Signatures of such computations can be identified in the visual cortex where complex image content such as the identity of faces can be linearly decoded irrespective of nuisance variables, such as pose, lighting, or orientation. It remains a burning question, however, what elementary computations can contribute to representational untangling. We point out that the  basic but ubiquitous form of local nonlinearity the firing threshold can achieve untangling under nuisance variable uncertainty. We argue that the efficiency of this nonlinearity in achieving easily readable codes lies in its capability to balance between two computational goals: preservation of information and sparsification of neural responses. We show through recordings from visual cortical neurons that the threshold of biological neurons is in a range that is optimal for representational untangling.

Oldalak