Szemináriumok

Chemical sensing with synthetic receptors and nanostructures

Időpont: 
2019. 04. 09. 14:30
Hely: 
Building F, Entrance III, room F3123
Előadó: 
Róbert Gyurcsányi (BME)

Chemical sensing aims at direct/immediate identification and quantitation of chemical species in our environment. The environment should be understood in its broadest sense as ranging from measurements in space to detecting chemical species in our own body. The concept of rapid in-situ measurements, largely enabled by chemical sensors, matches well our future vision of gaining chemical information on site and using them directly in various feedback loops to? diagnose and control processes. Many of the challenges in this field have been addressed by the implementation of custom tailored synthetic receptors and nanostructures. Therefore, after a brief introduction of the chemical sensing field through its most important achievements, the talk with focus on our own results in the area of receptor development and nanosensing.

Exotic Fullerene-Cubane Materials

Időpont: 
2019. 04. 12. 10:15
Hely: 
Building F, Entrance III, seminar room of Department of Theoretical Physics
Előadó: 
Sándor Pekker (Wigner)

Exotic Fullerene-Cubane Materials: From Rotor-Stator Cocrystals to Ultrahard Amorphous Solids

A Chineese research group found recently two new phases in our previously prepared fullerene-cubane system after a high-pressure treatment: (i) a crystalline material of amorphous constituents; and (ii) an extended amorphous solid, harder than diamond. Phase (i) has been addressed as a new type of partially disordered solids, but its microscopic structure has not been specified. The new materials complete the rich family of fullerene-cubane materials consisting of such exotic phases as recognition controlled cocrystals with rotor-stator dynamics, rotor-in-rotor materials and interpenetrating networks of percolating copolymers. In the first part of the talk I outline the general structural characteristics of fullerenes, which are responsible for the great variety of their solid state reactions and the propensity for the formation of disordered solid derivatives. Then I discuss the polymers and cocrystals of fullerenes stressing the role of static and dynamic disorder. I detail the rotor-stator properties and the thermal copolymerization of various fullerene-cubane cocrystals. Finally I suggest a preliminary molecular model for the structure of the recently found phase (i).

Relaxation in tunnel coupled 1D superfluids

Időpont: 
2019. 04. 15. 14:15
Hely: 
Building F, Entrance III, Department of Theoretical Physics, Library
Előadó: 
Marine Pigneur (TU Wien)

Atomic interactions introduce an intrinsic non-linearity in Bosonic Josephson Junctions, making them richer than their condensed matter analogue. We experimentally study the effects of particle interactions on the tunneling dynamics of two coupled elongated Bose-Einstein condensate. The trapping geometry is a tunable double-well generated by an atom chip. 

Using radio-frequency dressing, we deform a single harmonic atom trap, in which the atoms are initially condensed, into a double-well potential and realize a splitting of the BEC wave function. A large spatial separation and a tilt of the double-well enable us to prepare a broad variety of initial states by precisely adjusting the initial population and relative phase of the two wave packets, while preserving the phase coherence. 

In particular, imprinting a global relative phase between the superfluids leads to Josephson oscillations that we can investigate for various coupling strengths. The observed dynamics exhibits a rapid relaxation toward a phase-locked equilibrium state, which goes beyond the predictions of the two site Bose-Hubbard model. As the relaxation escapes the existing description, both 1D and 3D, we account for it using an empirical friction and investigate the dependence of the damping magnitude with our experimental parameters. It results that the relaxation does not depend on the tunnel coupling and depends on the atom number as N-1/2. We currently search for a relaxation mechanism compatible with our experimental observations.

A possible room temperature quantum spin Hall material

Időpont: 
2019. 04. 18. 08:15
Hely: 
Building F, Entrance I, 1st Floor, Department of Physics, Room 5 (seminar) room.
Előadó: 
Péter Nemes-Incze (MTA EK)

Full title: "STM investigation of Jacutingaite: a possible room temperature quantum spin Hall material"

Abstract: "Quantum spin Hall (QSH) insulators are two-dimensional topological materials that have recently attracted tremendous interest, due to the promise of applications from low-power electronics to quantum computing. A major challenge in this field is the identification of large gap QSH materials, which would enable room temperature dissipationless transport in their edge states. Here we show that the layered mineral jacutingaite (Pt2HgSe3) realizes the QSH state, within the framework of the Kane-Mele model. Using scanning tunneling microscopy, we measure a band gap of 110 meV and identify the hallmark edge states at single layer steps on top of the bulk crystal. As predicted previously by Marrazzo et al. (PRL 120, 117701 (2018)), we identify the topological nature of the gap by calculating the Z2 invariant, using density functional theory. By scotch tape exfoliation, we prepare thin flakes of the material and show that it can be incorporated into heterostructures of 2D materials, using the well-established dry stacking techniques."

Relating boundary entanglement to scattering data of the bulk

Időpont: 
2019. 04. 26. 10:15
Hely: 
Building F, Entrance III, seminar room of Department of Theoretical Physics
Előadó: 
Péter Lévay (BME)

According to a recent idea, curved bulk space-time is an emergent entity coming from entanglement patterns residing on its boundary. Recently, apart from the bulk and its boundary a new space called kinematic space has been introduced. Kinematic space, which is just the space of geodesics of the bulk, acts as an intermediary that translates between the boundary language of quantum information and entanglement, and the bulk language of gravity and geometry.

Within the framework of the $ADS_3/CFT_2$ duality we show how scattering data of a simple geometric bulk scattering problem can be related to boundary entanglement of the CFT vacuum. This connection enables a calculation of the Berry curvature living on kinematic space. The associated gauge degree of freedom (Berry's Phase) is related to the freedom of regularizing the length spectra of the geodesics of the bulk, or equivalently introducing different cut-offs for the boundary CFT. The Berry curvature turns out to be just the so called Crofton form of kinematic space with a coefficient depending on the scattering energy. We show how the Berry-Crofton form defines a causal structure on kinematic space corresponding to the strong subadditivity structure of entanglement entropy for boundary subsystems. We conjecture that applying results from Algebraic Scattering Theory our ideas can be generalized for more general states corresponding to more general bulk geometries and also the general $AdS_{n+1}/CFT_n$ correspondence.

Quantum many-body scars, mixed phase spaces and non-universal thermalization

Időpont: 
2019. 05. 03. 10:15
Hely: 
Building F, Entrance III, seminar room of Department of Theoretical Physics
Előadó: 
Maksym Serbyn (IST Austria)

The statistical mechanics description of many-particle systems rests on the assumption of ergodicity, the ability of a system to explore all allowed configurations in the phase space. For quantum many-body systems statistical mechanics predicts the equilibration of highly excited non-equilibrium state towards a featureless thermal state. Hence, it is highly desirable to explore possible ways to avoid ergodicity in quantum systems. Many-body localization presents one generic mechanism for a strong violation of ergodicity relying on the presence of quenched disorder. In my talk I will discuss a different mechanism of the weak ergodicity breaking relevant for the experimentally realized Rydberg-atom quantum simulator [1]. This mechanism arises from the presence of special eigenstates in the many-body spectrum that are reminiscent of quantum scars in chaotic non-interacting systems [2]. I will construct the weak deformation of the Rydberg chain Hamiltonian that makes revivals virtually perfect [3]. In the second part of the talk I will provide a dynamical perspective on quantum scars. I will show the occurrence of mixed phase space within time-dependent variational principle (TDVP) description of dynamics. I will use TDVP to find new scars and explore their response to perturbations of the Hamiltonian. Finally, I will argue that the mixed phase space generally leads to non-universal dependence of thermalization on the initial state and discuss a new opportunities for the creation of novel states with long-lived coherence in systems that are now experimentally realizable [1].

 
[1] H. Bernien, et al., Nature 551, 579–584 (2017), arXiv:1707.04344
[2] C. J. Turner, A. A. Michailidis, D. A. Abanin, M. Serbyn, Z. Papić, Nature Physics (May 2018), arXiv:1711.03528 and Phys. Rev. B 98, 155134 (2018) arXiv:1806.10933
[3] S. Choi, C. J. Turner, et al., arXiv:1812.05561

Quantum rifling

Időpont: 
2019. 05. 06. 14:15
Hely: 
Building F, Entrance III, Department of Theoretical Physics, Library
Előadó: 
Daniel Szombati (U Queensland)

Title: "Quantum Rifling: Revisiting the Stern-Gerlach experiment with a twist"

Daniel will give us an informal overview of his experimental results on non-equilibrium dynamics of a strongly driven superconducting qubit, measured through a superconducting resonator. 

 
The slides can be found here: 
 

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