Quantum Statistical Mechanics - MAQM
de
lundi 27 mai 2024 (09:00)
à
jeudi 30 mai 2024 (18:00)
lundi 27 mai 2024
09:00
The gapped phases of O(n) quantum spin chains
-
Bruno Nachtergaele
(
UC Davis
)
The gapped phases of O(n) quantum spin chains
Bruno Nachtergaele
(
UC Davis
)
09:00 - 09:55
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
The ground state phase diagram of the O(n) quantum spin chains with nearest neighbor interactions, for n≥$ or larger, shows two gapped phases separated by a critical point often referred to as the Reshetikhin point. One of the phases contains the SU(n) invariant -P^{(0)} model which has been analyzed using the Temperley-Lieb algebra and, more recently, by a random loop model. These works show the ground state to be dimerized. The other phase contains a special point with exact MPS ground states that generalize the AKLT state (corresponding to the case n=3). For even n, that point too is a phase with breaking of the translation invariance down to period 2. We show that it is not dimerized in the usual sense of the term and uncover other interesting new properties(joint work with Michael Ragone).
10:00
The Quantum Symmetric Simple Exclusion Process
-
Denis Bernard
(
LPENS, Paris
)
The Quantum Symmetric Simple Exclusion Process
Denis Bernard
(
LPENS, Paris
)
10:00 - 10:55
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
An alternative title could have been « How to characterise coherences and fluctuations in diffusive out-of-equilibrium many-body quantum systems ? ». In general, the difficulty to characterise non-equilibrium systems lies in the fact that there is no analog of the Boltzmann distribution to describe thermodynamic variables and their fluctuations. Over the last 20 years, however, it was observed that fluctuations of diffusive transport show universal properties that do not depend on the microscopic details. The general framework to characterise these systems from a macroscopic point of view is now called the Macroscopic Fluctuation Theory. A natural question is whether this framework can be extended to quantum mechanics to describe the statistics of purely quantum mechanical effects such as interference or entanglement in diffusive out-of-equilibrium systems. With this aim in mind, I will introduce the Quantum Symmetric Simple Exclusion Process (QSSEP), a microscopic model system of fluctuating quantum diffusion. I will in particular present the recent observation that fluctuations of coherences in QSSEP have a natural interpretation as free cumulants, a concept from free probability theory, and heuristic arguments why we expect free probability theory to be an appropriate framework to describe coherent fluctuations in generic mesoscopic systems.
10:55
Coffee break
Coffee break
10:55 - 11:15
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
11:15
Energy-momentum spectrum and effective mass of a strongly coupled polaron
-
Robert Seiringer
(
IST Austria
)
Energy-momentum spectrum and effective mass of a strongly coupled polaron
Robert Seiringer
(
IST Austria
)
11:15 - 12:10
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
We explain recent bounds on the quantum corrections to the (classical) Pekar approximation of the ground state energy of the Fröhlich polaron model in the strong coupling limit, and their consequence on the existence of excited states and the polaron's effective mass.
12:10
Lunch
Lunch
12:10 - 14:00
14:00
Anyons in a tight wave-guide and the Tonks-Girardeau gas
-
Nicolas Rougerie
(
UMPA, Lyon
)
Anyons in a tight wave-guide and the Tonks-Girardeau gas
Nicolas Rougerie
(
UMPA, Lyon
)
14:00 - 14:55
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
Anyons with a statistical phase parameter \alpha \in (0,2) are quasi-particles interpolating between bosons and fermions. For topological reasons, they only exist in a 1D or 2D world, ie as excitations of special 2D or 1D systems. There exists a main agreed-upon 2D model (equivalent to usual bosons or fermions carrying Aharonov-Bohm magnetic fluxes of intensity \alpha) but several 1D models. We ask which one, if any, of the latter is selected as the 1D limit of the 2D theory. We hence consider the dimensional reduction for a 2D system of anyons in a tight wave-guide and prove that both the eigenenergies and the eigenfunctions are asymptotically decoupled into the loose confining direction and the tight confining direction. The limit 1D system in the loose direction is given by the impenetrable Tonks-Girardeau Bose gas independently of \alpha. No trace is thus left, at leading order, of the long-range interactions of the 2D model. This comes about via the acquisition of a special phase factor, which gauges magnetic interactions away for aligned particles.
15:00
On the self-consistent Landauer-Büttiker formalism
-
Giovanna Marcelli
(
Università di Roma Tre
)
On the self-consistent Landauer-Büttiker formalism
Giovanna Marcelli
(
Università di Roma Tre
)
15:00 - 15:55
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
We provide sufficient conditions such that the time evolution of a mesoscopic tight-binding open system with a local Hartree-Fock non-linearity converges to a self-consistent non-equilibrium steady state, which is independent of the initial condition from the "small sample". We also show that the steady charge current intensities are given by Landauer-Büttiker-like formulas, and make the connection with the case of weakly self-interacting many-body systems. This is a joint work with Horia D. Cornean https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.01564.
15:55
Coffee break
Coffee break
15:55 - 16:15
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
16:15
Geometric correlation inequalities for spin systems
-
Daniel Ueltschi
(
University of Warwick
)
Geometric correlation inequalities for spin systems
Daniel Ueltschi
(
University of Warwick
)
16:15 - 17:10
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
I will review correlation inequalities for the two-point function of classical and quantum spin systems. These inequalities are “geometric” when they involve lattice sites. I will review the Simon-Lieb-Rivasseau, Messager-Miracle-Sole, and Lees-Taggi inequalities. I will point out that the Messager-Miracle-Sole inequalities can be extended to the spin-1/2 quantum XY model.
mardi 28 mai 2024
09:00
Quasi periodic 2D Ising and Weyl semimetals
-
Vieri Mastropietro
(
Università di Milano
)
Quasi periodic 2D Ising and Weyl semimetals
Vieri Mastropietro
(
Università di Milano
)
09:00 - 09:55
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
I will present results on the stability of the critical behavior of the 2D Ising Model and of an interacting Weyl semimetal in presence of quasi-periodic disorder. The analysis is based on fermionic RG combined with methods inspired by KAM theory.
10:00
Boundary states of a bulk gapped ground state in 2-D quantum spin systems
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Yoshiko Ogata
(
Kyoto University
)
Boundary states of a bulk gapped ground state in 2-D quantum spin systems
Yoshiko Ogata
(
Kyoto University
)
10:00 - 10:55
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
We introduce a natural mathematical definition of boundary states of a bulk gapped ground state in the operator algebraic framework of 2-D quantum spin systems. With the approximate Haag duality at the boundary, we derive a C*-tensor category M out of such boundary state. Under a non-triviality condition of the braiding in the bulk, we show that the Drinfeld center (with an asymptotic constraint) of M is equivalent to the bulk braided C*-tensor category.
10:55
Coffee break
Coffee break
10:55 - 11:15
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
11:15
The eigenstate thermalization hypothesis and free probability
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Laura Foini
(
IPhT, Paris-Saclay
)
The eigenstate thermalization hypothesis and free probability
Laura Foini
(
IPhT, Paris-Saclay
)
11:15 - 12:10
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
The eigenstate thermalization hypothesis (ETH) was developed to explain the mechanism by which "chaotic" systems reach thermal equilibrium from a generic state. ETH is an ansatz for the matrix elements of physical operators in the basis of the Hamiltonian, and since its postulation, numerous studies have characterized these quantities in increasingly fine detail, providing a solid framework for understanding the (thermo)dynamics of quantum many-body systems. ETH can be viewed as a generalisation of random matrix theory and, in fact, within this ansatz matrix elements are modeled as random variables. In our work, we have generalized the ETH ansatz in order to take into account correlations between matrix elements which are essential to describe high-order correlation functions. By analogy with the theory of random matrices, one can assume a certain hierarchy between these correlations and show how this generalized ansatz underlies a relationship between ETH and free probability. This relationship allowed us to unveil a particular structure of the time-dependent correlation functions in thermal equilibrium in terms of free cumulants.
12:10
Lunch
Lunch
12:10 - 14:00
14:00
TBA
-
Wojciech De Roeck
(
K.U. Leuven University
)
TBA
Wojciech De Roeck
(
K.U. Leuven University
)
14:00 - 14:55
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
15:00
TBA
-
Martin Fraas
(
UC Davis
)
TBA
Martin Fraas
(
UC Davis
)
15:00 - 15:55
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
15:55
Coffee break
Coffee break
15:55 - 16:15
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
16:15
Wannier localizability as a tool to distinguish topological phases of matter
-
Gianluca Panati
(
Università di Roma "La Sapienza"
)
Wannier localizability as a tool to distinguish topological phases of matter
Gianluca Panati
(
Università di Roma "La Sapienza"
)
16:15 - 17:10
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
The talk concerns the correspondence between the topological triviality of gapped quantum systems and the existence of an orthonormal basis of well-localized Wannier functions spanning the range of the Fermi projection. For periodic systems in dimension 2 and 3 such a correspondence has been noticed and proved, and dubbed Localization Dichotomy. Under general assumptions, it has been proved that: (i) either there exists a composite Wannier basis which is exponentially localized, and, correspondingly, the Chern class of the Fermi projection is zero; or (ii) any possible choice of a composite Wannier basis yields an infinite expectation value of the squared position operator (in numerical simulations, such a value diverges when the spacing of the grid in quasi-momentum space tends to zero). I will report on recent attempts to generalize such a Localization Dichotomy to non-periodic gapped quantum systems. These methods offer a way to describe topological non-triviality directly in position space, without using the decomposition with respect to quasi-momentum. The results are based on joint works with G. Marcelli, M. Moscolari, and V. Rossi.
mercredi 29 mai 2024
09:00
Continuous monitoring of a single random walker on a lattice, classical or quantum, and KPZ physics.
-
Tony Jin
(
INPHYNI, Nice
)
Continuous monitoring of a single random walker on a lattice, classical or quantum, and KPZ physics.
Tony Jin
(
INPHYNI, Nice
)
09:00 - 09:55
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
I will present some of our recent results concerning the dynamical fluctuations of single, classical or quantum, random walker on a lattice, subject to external continuous monitoring. Exploiting analogies with KPZ physics, I will show that these systems have non trivial scaling of their fluctuations and can exhibit a phase transition in dimensions higher than 1.
10:00
Quantum measurements and generalized Porter-Thomas distribution in many body dynamic
-
Andrea De Luca
(
LPTM, Cergy
)
Quantum measurements and generalized Porter-Thomas distribution in many body dynamic
Andrea De Luca
(
LPTM, Cergy
)
10:00 - 10:55
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
10:55
Coffee break
Coffee break
10:55 - 11:15
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
11:15
Thermalization in quantum spin systems
-
David Pérez Garcia
(
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
)
Thermalization in quantum spin systems
David Pérez Garcia
(
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
)
11:15 - 12:10
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
Motivated by understanding how temperature affects topological order, I will present some recent estimates for the mixing time of Davies dynamics in quantum spin systems.
12:10
Lunch
Lunch
12:10 - 14:00
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
14:00
Symmetry shapes thermodynamics of macroscopic quantum systems
-
Ariane Soret
(
University of Luxembourg
)
Symmetry shapes thermodynamics of macroscopic quantum systems
Ariane Soret
(
University of Luxembourg
)
14:00 - 14:55
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
Symmetries play a fundamental role in shaping physical theories, from quantum mechanics to thermodynamics. Studying the entropic, energetic, or dynamic signatures of underlying symmetries in quantum systems is an active field of research, from fundamental questions about entropy scalings, ground state properties, or thermalization, to the optimization of quantum computing or numerical simulation procedures, and is gaining momentum due to rapid experimental advances, particularly in cold atoms [1]. In this work [2], we derive a systematic approach to the thermodynamics of quantum systems based on the underlying symmetry groups. We show that the entropy of a system can be described in terms of group-theoretical quantities that are largely independent of the details of its density matrix. We apply our technique to generic N identical interacting d-level quantum systems. Using permutation invariance, we find that, for large N, the entropy displays a universal large deviation behavior with a rate function s(x) that is completely independent of the microscopic details of the model, but depends only on the size of the irreducible representations of the permutation group. In turn, the partition function is shown to satisfy a large deviation principle with a free energy f(x)=e(x)-s(x)/β, where e(x) is a rate function that only depends on the ground state energy of particular subspaces determined by group representation theory. We demonstrate the power of our approach by applying it to the nontrivial task of describing phase transitions governed by the interplay of quantum and thermal fluctuations in the transverse-field Curie-Weiss model. [1] Masahito Ueda. “Quantum equilibration, thermalization and prethermalization in ultracold atoms.” Nat. Rev. Phys., 2(12):669, 2020. [2] Vasco Cavina, Ariane Soret, Timur Aslyamov, Krzysztof Ptaszyński, and Massimiliano Esposito. “Symmetry shapes thermodynamics of macroscopic quantum systems”. arXiv:2402.04214, 2024.
19:30
Conference dinner
Conference dinner
19:30 - 21:30
jeudi 30 mai 2024
09:00
Approach to equilibrium in translation-invariant quantum systems
-
Clément Tauber
(
CEREMADE, Paris
)
Approach to equilibrium in translation-invariant quantum systems
Clément Tauber
(
CEREMADE, Paris
)
09:00 - 09:55
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
In this talk I will formulate the problem of approach to equilibrium in algebraic quantum statistical mechanics and study some of its structural aspects, focusing on the relation between the zeroth law of thermodynamics (approach to equilibrium) and the second law (increase of entropy). The main result is that approach to equilibrium is necessarily accompanied by a strict increase of the specific (mean) entropy. In the course of our analysis, I will introduce the concept of quantum weak Gibbs state which is of independent interest. This talk is based on joint work with Vojkan Jaksic and Claude-Alain Pillet.
10:00
Adiabatic Time Evolution and Quasi-Static Processes in Translation-Invariant Quantum Systems
-
Claude-Alain Pillet
(
CPT, Toulon
)
Adiabatic Time Evolution and Quasi-Static Processes in Translation-Invariant Quantum Systems
Claude-Alain Pillet
(
CPT, Toulon
)
10:00 - 10:55
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
We study the slowly varying, non-autonomous dynamics of a translation-invariant quantum spin system on the lattice Z^d . This system is assumed to be initially in thermal equilibrium, and we consider realizations of quasi-static processes in the adiabatic limit. By combining the Gibbs variational principle with the notion of quantum weak Gibbs states, we establish a number of general structural results regarding such realizations. In particular, we show that such a quasi-static process is incompatible with the property of approach to equilibrium. This is a joint work with V. Jaksic and C. Tauber.
10:55
Coffee break
Coffee break
10:55 - 11:15
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
11:15
Many-body adiabatic dynamics via convergent expansions
-
Marcello Porta
(
SISSA, Trieste
)
Many-body adiabatic dynamics via convergent expansions
Marcello Porta
(
SISSA, Trieste
)
11:15 - 12:10
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
I will discuss how to represent the real-time dynamics of lattice fermionic systems exposed to slowly varying time-dependent perturbations in terms of Euclidean (i.e. imaginary time) correlation functions. The advantage is that, in many situations, time-ordered Euclidean correlation functions satisfy much better space-time decay estimates than their real-time counterparts. As an application, I will discuss how the cluster expansion for Euclidean correlations can be used to prove the convergence of the real-time Duhamel series for gapped, weakly interacting many-body fermionic systems, and the many-body adiabatic theorem at low temperature. In the last part of the talk, I will focus on gapless models, and I will show how the framework can be used to study the validity of linear response for non-interacting 1d systems and for edge currents. Based on a joint work with R. L. Greenblatt, M. Lange, G. Marcelli, and on ongoing work with H. P. Singh.
12:10
Lunch
Lunch
12:10 - 14:00
14:00
Chiral spin liquids: tensor network framework and quantum state preparation
-
Didier Poilblanc
(
LPT, Toulouse
)
Chiral spin liquids: tensor network framework and quantum state preparation
Didier Poilblanc
(
LPT, Toulouse
)
14:00 - 14:55
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
Chiral spin liquids are topological-ordered states of matter, quantum spin analogs of the celebrated electronic Fractional Quantum Hall states. I will discuss how they can be represented in terms of tensor networks (despite a no-go theorem!). In a second step, I will discuss recent efforts for adiabatic preparation of such states using Floquet engineering.
15:00
The weakly interacting Bose gas at positive temperature
-
Phan Thành Nam
(
LMU, Munich
)
The weakly interacting Bose gas at positive temperature
Phan Thành Nam
(
LMU, Munich
)
15:00 - 15:55
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
We discuss a homogeneous system of interacting bosons in the mean-field regime where the temperature is comparable to the critical temperature for the Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC). By a rigorous implementation of Bogoliubov's approximation, we derive asymptotic formulas for the free energy and the reduced density matrices of the corresponding Gibbs state. In particular, our method allows to analyze explicitly the U(1) symmetry breaking for BEC and superfluidity. This is joint work with Andreas Deuchert and Marcin Napiórkowski.
15:55
Coffee break
Coffee break
15:55 - 16:15
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
16:15
Bosonization of Large Systems of Interacting Fermions
-
Niels Benedikter
(
Università degli Studi di Milano
)
Bosonization of Large Systems of Interacting Fermions
Niels Benedikter
(
Università degli Studi di Milano
)
16:15 - 17:10
Room: Amphithéatre Schwartz
The behavior of electrons in a metal presents a wide variety of emergent behavior including a number of phase transitions. The mean-field scaling limit acts as a simplified model capturing part of this complexity. In this limit, results going beyond the precision of Hartree-Fock theory have recently been obtained by bosonization methods. I will review the expansion of the ground state energy and present results extending to the dynamics and momentum distribution of excitations.