Adrian E. Feiguin
Northeastern University
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Featured researches published by Adrian E. Feiguin.
Physical Review Letters | 2004
Steven R. White; Adrian E. Feiguin
We describe an extension to the density matrix renormalization group method incorporating real-time evolution. Its application to transport problems in systems out of equilibrium and frequency dependent correlation functions is discussed and illustrated in several examples. We simulate a scattering process in a spin chain which generates a spatially nonlocal entangled wave function.
Journal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment | 2007
Bela Bauer; Lincoln D. Carr; Hans Gerd Evertz; Adrian E. Feiguin; Juliana Freire; Sebastian Fuchs; Lukas Gamper; Jan Gukelberger; Emanuel Gull; S Guertler; A Hehn; R Igarashi; Sergei V. Isakov; David Koop; Pn Ma; P Mates; Haruhiko Matsuo; Olivier Parcollet; G Pawłowski; Jd Picon; Lode Pollet; Emanuele Santos; V. W. Scarola; Ulrich Schollwöck; Cláudio T. Silva; Brigitte Surer; Synge Todo; Simon Trebst; Matthias Troyer; Michael L. Wall
We present release 2.0 of the ALPS (Algorithms and Libraries for Physics Simulations) project, an open source software project to develop libraries and application programs for the simulation of strongly correlated quantum lattice models such as quantum magnets, lattice bosons, and strongly correlated fermion systems. The code development is centered on common XML and HDF5 data formats, libraries to simplify and speed up code development, common evaluation and plotting tools, and simulation programs. The programs enable non-experts to start carrying out serial or parallel numerical simulations by providing basic implementations of the important algorithms for quantum lattice models: classical and quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) using non-local updates, extended ensemble simulations, exact and full diagonalization (ED), the density matrix renormalization group (DMRG) both in a static version and a dynamic time-evolving block decimation (TEBD) code, and quantum Monte Carlo solvers for dynamical mean field theory (DMFT). The ALPS libraries provide a powerful framework for programmers to develop their own applications, which, for instance, greatly simplify the steps of porting a serial code onto a parallel, distributed memory machine. Major changes in release 2.0 include the use of HDF5 for binary data, evaluation tools in Python, support for the Windows operating system, the use of CMake as build system and binary installation packages for Mac OS X and Windows, and integration with the VisTrails workflow provenance tool. The software is available from our web server at http://alps.comp-phys.org/.
Science | 2008
R. Hanson; V. V. Dobrovitski; Adrian E. Feiguin; Oliver Gywat; D. D. Awschalom
Phase coherence is a fundamental concept in quantum mechanics. Understanding the loss of coherence is paramount for future quantum information processing. We studied the coherent dynamics of a single central spin (a nitrogen-vacancy center) coupled to a bath of spins (nitrogen impurities) in diamond. Our experiments show that both the internal interactions of the bath and the coupling between the central spin and the bath can be tuned in situ, allowing access to regimes with surprisingly different behavior. The observed dynamics are well explained by analytics and numerical simulations, leading to valuable insight into the loss of coherence in spin systems. These measurements demonstrate that spins in diamond provide an excellent test bed for models and protocols in quantum information.
Physical Review Letters | 2000
Adriana Moreo; Matthias Mayr; Adrian E. Feiguin; Seiji Yunoki; Elbio Dagotto
Computational studies of models for manganese oxides show the generation of large coexisting metallic and insulating clusters with equal electronic density, in agreement with the recently discovered micrometer-sized inhomogeneities in manganites. The clusters are induced by disorder on exchange and hopping amplitudes near first-order transitions of the nondisordered strongly coupled system. The random-field Ising model illustrates the qualitative aspects of our results. Percolative characteristics are natural in this context. The conclusions are general and apply to a variety of compounds.
Physical Review Letters | 2001
Matthias Mayr; Adriana Moreo; J. A. Vergés; Jeanette Arispe; Adrian E. Feiguin; Elbio Dagotto
The resistivity rho(dc) of manganites is studied using a random resistor-network, based on phase separation between metallic and insulating domains. When percolation occurs, both as chemical composition or temperature vary, results in good agreement with experiments are obtained. Similar conclusions are reached using quantum calculations and microscopic considerations. Above the Curie temperature, it is argued that ferromagnetic clusters should exist in Mn oxides. Small magnetic fields induce large rho(dc) changes and a bad-metal state with (disconnected) insulating domains.
Physical Review B | 2005
Adrian E. Feiguin; Steven R. White
We present a time-step targetting scheme to simulate real-time dynamics efficiently using the density matrix renormalization group (DMRG). The algorithm works on ladders and systems with interactions beyond nearest neighbors, in contrast to existing Suzuki-Trotter based approaches.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Marcelo Jaime; Ramzy Daou; Scott A. Crooker; Franziska Weickert; Atsuko Uchida; Adrian E. Feiguin; C. D. Batista; Hanna A. Dabkowska; Bruce D. Gaulin
Strong geometrical frustration in magnets leads to exotic states such as spin liquids, spin supersolids, and complex magnetic textures. SrCu2(BO3)2, a spin-1/2 Heisenberg antiferromagnet in the archetypical Shastry–Sutherland lattice, exhibits a rich spectrum of magnetization plateaus and stripe-like magnetic textures in applied fields. The structure of these plateaus is still highly controversial due to the intrinsic complexity associated with frustration and competing length scales. We discover magnetic textures in SrCu2(BO3)2 via magnetostriction and magnetocaloric measurements in fields up to 100.75 T. In addition to observing low-field fine structure with unprecedented resolution, the data also reveal lattice responses at 73.6 T and at 82 T that we attribute, using a controlled density matrix renormalization group approach, to a unanticipated 2/5 plateau and to the long-predicted 1/2 plateau.
Physical Review Letters | 2001
Takashi Hotta; Adrian E. Feiguin; Elbio Dagotto
Spin-charge-orbital ordered structures in doped layered manganites are investigated using an orbital-degenerate double-exchange model tightly coupled to Jahn-Teller distortions. In the ferromagnetic phase, unexpected diagonal stripes at x = 1/m ( m = integer) are observed, as in recent experiments. These stripes are induced by the orbital degree of freedom, which forms a staggered pattern in the background. A pi shift in the orbital order across stripes is identified, analogous to the pi shift in spin order across stripes in cuprates. At x = 1/4 and 1/3, another nonmagnetic phase with diagonal static charge stripes is stabilized at intermediate values of the t(2g)-spins exchange coupling.
Physical Review B | 2007
Adrian E. Feiguin; F. Heidrich-Meisner
We study the properties of a one-dimensional (1D) gas of fermions trapped in a lattice by means of the density matrix renormalization group method, focusing on the case of unequal spin populations, and strong attractive interaction. In the low-density regime, the system phase separates into a well-defined superconducting core and a fully polarized metallic cloud surrounding it. We argue that the superconducting phase corresponds to a 1D analog of the Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov (FFLO) state, with a quasicondensate of tightly bound bosonic pairs with a finite center-of-mass momentum that scales linearly with the magnetization. In the large density limit, the system allows for four phases: in the core, we either find a Fock state of localized pairs or a metallic shell with free spin-down fermions moving in a fully filled background of spin-up fermions. As the magnetization increases, the Fock state disappears to give room for a metallic phase, with a partially polarized superconducting FFLO shell and a fully polarized metallic cloud surrounding the core.
Physical Review Letters | 2003
Takashi Hotta; Mohammad Moraghebi; Adrian E. Feiguin; Adriana Moreo; Seiji Yunoki; Elbio Dagotto
Novel ground-state spin structures in undoped and lightly doped manganites are investigated based on the orbital-degenerate double-exchange model, via mean-field and numerical techniques. In undoped manganites, a new antiferromagnetic (AFM) state, called the E-type phase, is found adjacent in parameter space to the A-type AFM phase. Its structure is in agreement with recent experimental results. This insulating E-AFM state is also competing with a ferromagnetic metallic phase as well. For doped layered manganites, the phase diagram includes another new AFM phase of the CxE1-x type. Experimental signatures of the new phases are discussed.