Person: Kitagawa, Takuya
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Publication Observation of Topologically Protected Bound States in Photonic Quantum Walks
(Nature Publishing Group, 2012) Kitagawa, Takuya; Broome, Matthew A.; Fedrizzi, Alessandro; Rudner, Mark S.; Berg, Erez; Kassal, Ivan; Aspuru-Guzik, Alan; Demler, Eugene; White, Andrew G.Topological phases exhibit some of the most striking phenomena in modern physics. Much of the rich behaviour of quantum Hall systems, topological insulators, and topological superconductors can be traced to the existence of robust bound states at interfaces between different topological phases. This robustness has applications in metrology and holds promise for future uses in quantum computing. Engineered quantum systems—notably in photonics, where wavefunctions can be observed directly—provide versatile platforms for creating and probing a variety of topological phases. Here we use photonic quantum walks to observe bound states between systems with different bulk topological properties and demonstrate their robustness to perturbations—a signature of topological protection. Although such bound states are usually discussed for static (time-independent) systems, here we demonstrate their existence in an explicitly time-dependent situation. Moreover, we discover a new phenomenon: a topologically protected pair of bound states unique to periodically driven systems.
Publication Transport Properties of Non-Equilibrium Systems Under the Application of Light: Photo-Induced Quantum Hall Insulators Without Landau Levels
(American Physical Society, 2011) Kitagawa, Takuya; Oka, Takashi; Brataas, Arne; Fu, Liang; Demler, EugeneIn this paper, we study transport properties of nonequilibrium systems under the application of light in many-terminal measurements, using the Floquet picture. We propose and demonstrate that the quantum transport properties can be controlled in materials such as graphene and topological insulators, via the application of light. Remarkably, under the application of off-resonant light, topological transport properties can be induced; these systems exhibit quantum Hall effects in the absence of a magnetic field with a near quantization of the Hall conductance, realizing so-called quantum Hall systems without Landau levels first proposed by Haldane.
Publication Exploring Topological Phases With Quantum Walks
(American Physical Society, 2010) Kitagawa, Takuya; Rudner, Mark; Berg, Erez; Demler, EugeneThe quantum walk was originally proposed as a quantum mechanical analogue of the classical random walk, and has since become a powerful tool in quantum information science. In this paper, we show that discrete time quantum walks provide a versatile platform for studying topological phases, which are currently the subject of intense theoretical and experimental investigation. In particular, we demonstrate that recent experimental realizations of quantum walks simulate a non-trivial one dimensional topological phase. With simple modifications, the quantum walk can be engineered to realize all of the topological phases which have been classified in one and two dimensions. We further discuss the existence of robust edge modes at phase boundaries, which provide experimental signatures for the non-trivial topological character of the system.
Publication Majorana Fermions in Equilibrium and Driven Cold Atom Quantum Wires
(American Physical Society, 2011) Jiang, Liang; Kitagawa, Takuya; Alicea, Jason; Akhmerov, A.; Pekker, David; Refael, Gil; Cirac, J.; Demler, Eugene; Lukin, Mikhail; Zoller, PeterWe introduce a new approach to create and detect Majorana fermions using optically trapped 1D fermionic atoms. In our proposed setup, two internal states of the atoms couple via an optical Raman transition--simultaneously inducing an effective spin-orbit interaction and magnetic field--while a background molecular BEC cloud generates s-wave pairing for the atoms. The resulting cold atom quantum wire supports Majorana fermions at phase boundaries between topologically trivial and nontrivial regions, as well as 'Floquet Majorana fermions' when the system is periodically driven. We analyze experimental parameters, detection schemes, and various imperfections.
Publication Topological Characterization of Periodically-Driven Quantum Systems
(American Physical Society, 2010) Kitagawa, Takuya; Berg, Erez; Rudner, Mark; Demler, EugeneTopological properties of physical systems can lead to robust behaviors that are insensitive to microscopic details. Such topologically robust phenomena are not limited to static systems but can also appear in driven quantum systems. In this paper, we show that the Floquet operators of periodically driven systems can be divided into topologically distinct (homotopy) classes, and give a simple physical interpretation of this classification in terms of the spectra of Floquet operators. Using this picture, we provide an intuitive understanding of the well-known phenomenon of quantized adiabatic pumping. Systems whose Floquet operators belong to the trivial class simulate the dynamics generated by time-independent Hamiltonians, which can be topologically classified according to the schemes developed for static systems. We demonstrate these principles through an example of a periodically driven two--dimensional hexagonal lattice model which exhibits several topological phases. Remarkably, one of these phases supports chiral edge modes even though the bulk is topologically trivial.
Publication Phase Sensitive Measurements of Order Parameters for Ultracold Atoms through Two Particles Interferometry
(2011) Kitagawa, Takuya; Aspect, Alain; Greiner, Markus; Demler, EugeneNontrivial symmetry of order parameters is crucial in some of the most interesting quantum many-body states of ultracold atoms and condensed matter systems. Examples in cold atoms include p-wave Feshbach molecules and d-wave paired states of fermions that could be realized in optical lattices in the Hubbard regime. Identifying these states in experiments requires measurements of the relative phase of different components of the entangled pair wavefunction. We propose and discuss two schemes for such phase sensitive measurements, based on two-particle interference revealed in atom-atom or atomic density correlations. Our schemes can also be used for relative phase measurements for non-trivial particle-hole order parameters, such as d-density wave order.
Publication Anomalous Expansion of Attractively Interacting Fermionic Atoms in an Optical Lattice
(American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2010) Hackermuller, Lucia; Schneider, Ulrich; Moreno-Cardoner, Maria; Kitagawa, Takuya; Will, Sebastian; Best, Thorsten; Demler, Eugene; Altman, Ehud; Bloch, Immanuel; Paredes, BelenStrong correlations can dramatically modify the thermodynamics of a quantum many-particle system. Especially intriguing behaviour can appear when the system adiabatically enters a strongly correlated regime, for the interplay between entropy and strong interactions can lead to counterintuitive effects. A well known example is the so-called Pomeranchuk effect, occurring when liquid (^3)He is adiabatically compressed towards its crystalline phase. Here, we report on a novel anomalous, isentropic effect in a spin mixture of attractively interacting fermionic atoms in an optical lattice. As we adiabatically increase the attraction between the atoms we observe that the gas, instead of contracting, anomalously expands. This expansion results from the combination of two effects induced by pair formation in a lattice potential: the suppression of quantum fluctuations as the attraction increases, which leads to a dominant role of entropy, and the progressive loss of the spin degree of freedom, which forces the gas to excite additional orbital degrees of freedom and expand to outer regions of the trap in order to maintain the entropy. The unexpected thermodynamics we observe reveal fundamentally distinctive features of pairing in the fermionic Hubbard model.
Publication Correlated Phases of Bosons in Tilted Frustrated Lattices
(American Physical Society, 2011) Pielawa, Susanne; Kitagawa, Takuya; Berg, Erez; Sachdev, SubirWe study the "tilting" of Mott insulators of bosons into metastable states. These are described by Hamiltonians acting on resonant subspaces, and have rich possibilities for correlated phases with non-trivial entanglement of pseudospin degrees of freedom encoded in the boson density. We extend a previous study [S. Sachdev, K. Sengupta, and S. M. Girvin, Phys. Rev. B 66, 075128 (2002)] of cubic lattices to a variety of lattices and tilt directions in 2 dimensions: square, decorated square, triangular, and kagome. For certain configurations three-body interactions are necessary to ensure that the energy of the effective resonant subspace is bounded from below. We find quantum phases with Ising density wave order, with superfluidity transverse to the tilt direction, and a quantum liquid state with no broken symmetry. The existence of the quantum liquids state is shown by an exact solution for a particular correlated boson model. We also find cases for which the resonant subspace is described by effective quantum dimer models.
Publication The Dynamics and Prethermalization of One Dimensional Quantum Systems Probed Through the Full Distributions of Quantum Noise
(Institute of Physics, 2011) Kitagawa, Takuya; Imambekov, Adilet; Schmiedmayer, Jörg; Demler, EugeneQuantum noise correlations have been employed in several areas in physics including condensed matter, quantum optics and ultracold atom to reveal non-classical states of the systems. So far, such analysis mostly focused on systems in equilibrium. In this paper, we show that quantum noise is also a useful tool to characterize and study the non-equilibrium dynamics of one dimensional system. We consider the Ramsey sequence of one dimensional, two-component bosons, and obtain simple, analytical expressions of time evolutions of the full distribution functions for this strongly-correlated, many-body system. The analysis can also be directly applied to the evolution of interference patterns between two one dimensional quasi-condensates created from a single condensate through splitting. Using the tools developed in this paper, we demonstrate that one dimensional dynamics in these systems exhibits the phenomenon known as "prethermalization", where the observables of non-equilibrium, long-time transient states become indistinguishable from those of thermal equilibrium states.
Publication Multimode Dynamics and Emergence of a Characteristic Length Scale in a One-Dimensional Quantum System
(American Physical Society (APS), 2013) Kuhnert, M.; Geiger, R.; Langen, T.; Gring, M.; Rauer, B.; Kitagawa, Takuya; Demler, Eugene; Adu Smith, D.; Schmiedmayer, J.We study the nonequilibrium dynamics of a coherently split one-dimensional Bose gas by measuring the full probability distribution functions of matter-wave interference. Observing the system on different length scales allows us to probe the dynamics of excitations on different energy scales, revealing two distinct length-scale-dependent regimes of relaxation. We measure the crossover length scale separating these two regimes and identify it with the prethermalized phase-correlation length of the system. Our approach enables a direct observation of the multimode dynamics characterizing one-dimensional quantum systems.