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Dive into the research topics where Gabriel Lemarié is active.

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Featured researches published by Gabriel Lemarié.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Experimental Observation of the Anderson Metal-Insulator Transition with Atomic Matter Waves

Julien Chabé; Gabriel Lemarié; B. Grémaud; Dominique Delande; Pascal Szriftgiser; Jean Claude Garreau

We realize experimentally an atom-optics quantum-chaotic system, the quasiperiodic kicked rotor, which is equivalent to a 3D disordered system that allows us to demonstrate the Anderson metal-insulator transition. Sensitive measurements of the atomic wave function and the use of finite-size scaling techniques make it possible to extract both the critical parameters and the critical exponent of the transition, the latter being in good agreement with the value obtained in numerical simulations of the 3D Anderson model.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Critical state of the Anderson transition: between a metal and an insulator.

Gabriel Lemarié; Hans Lignier; Dominique Delande; Pascal Szriftgiser; Jean Claude Garreau

Using a three-frequency one-dimensional kicked rotor experimentally realized with a cold atomic gas, we study the transport properties at the critical point of the metal-insulator Anderson transition. We accurately measure the time-evolution of an initially localized wavepacket and show that it displays at the critical point a scaling invariance characteristic of this second-order phase transition. The shape of the momentum distribution at the critical point is found to be in excellent agreement with the analytical form deduced from self-consistent theory of localization.


Physical Review A | 2009

Observation of the Anderson metal-insulator transition with atomic matter waves: Theory and experiment

Gabriel Lemarié; Julien Chabé; Pascal Szriftgiser; Jean Claude Garreau; Benoît Grémaud; Dominique Delande

Using a cold atomic gas exposed to laser pulses - a realization of the chaotic quasiperiodic kicked rotor with three incommensurate frequencies - we study experimentally and theoretically the Anderson metal-insulator transition in three dimensions. Sensitive measurements of the atomic wave function and the use of finite-size scaling techniques make it possible to unambiguously demonstrate the existence of a quantum phase transition and to measure its critical exponents. By taking proper account of systematic corrections to one-parameter scaling, we show the universality of the critical exponent {nu}=1.59{+-}0.01, which is found to be equal to the one previously computed for the Anderson model.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Phase diagram of the anisotropic Anderson transition with the atomic kicked rotor: theory and experiment

Matthias Lopez; Jean-François Clément; Gabriel Lemarié; Dominique Delande; Pascal Szriftgiser; Jean Claude Garreau

We realize experimentally a cold atom system equivalent to the 3D Anderson model of disordered solids where the anisotropy can be controlled by adjusting an experimentally accessible parameter. This allows us to study experimentally the disorder vs anisotropy phase diagram of the Anderson metal-insulator transition. Numerical and experimental data compare very well with each other and a theoretical analysis based on the self-consistent theory of localization correctly discribes the observed behavior, illustrating the flexibility of cold atom experiments for the study of transport phenomena in complex quantum systems.We realize experimentally a cold-atom system, the quasiperiodic kicked rotor, equivalent to the three-dimensional Anderson model of disordered solids where the anisotropy between the x direction and the y–z plane can be controlled by adjusting an experimentally accessible parameter. This allows us to study experimentally the disorder versus anisotropy phase diagram of the Anderson metal–insulator transition. Numerical and experimental data compare very well with each other and a theoretical analysis based on the self-consistent theory of localization correctly describes the observed behavior, illustrating the flexibility of cold-atom experiments for the study of transport phenomena in complex quantum systems.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Scaling theory of the Anderson transition in random graphs: ergodicity and universality

Ignacio Garcia-Mata; Olivier Giraud; Bertrand Georgeot; John Martin; Rémy Dubertrand; Gabriel Lemarié

We study the Anderson transition on a generic model of random graphs with a tunable branching parameter 1<K<2, through large scale numerical simulations and finite-size scaling analysis. We find that a single transition separates a localized phase from an unusual delocalized phase that is ergodic at large scales but strongly nonergodic at smaller scales. In the critical regime, multifractal wave functions are located on a few branches of the graph. Different scaling laws apply on both sides of the transition: a scaling with the linear size of the system on the localized side, and an unusual volumic scaling on the delocalized side. The critical scalings and exponents are independent of the branching parameter, which strongly supports the universality of our results.


Physical Review B | 2013

Universal scaling of the order-parameter distribution in strongly disordered superconductors

Gabriel Lemarié; Anand Kamlapure; D. Bucheli; L. Benfatto; J. Lorenzana; G. Seibold; Somesh Chandra Ganguli; Pratap Raychaudhuri; C. Castellani

We investigate theoretically and experimentally the statistical properties of the inhomogeneous order-parameter distribution (OPD) at the verge of the superconductor-insulator transition (SIT). We find within two prototype fermionic and bosonic models for disordered superconductors that one can identify a universal rescaling of the OPD. By performing scanning-tunneling microscopy experiments in three samples of NbN with increasing disorder we show that such a rescaling describes also with an excellent accuracy the experimental data. These results can provide a breakthrough in our understanding of the SIT.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Critical properties of the superfluid-bose-glass transition in two dimensions.

Juan Pablo Álvarez Zúñiga; David J. Luitz; Gabriel Lemarié; Nicolas Laflorencie

We investigate the superfluid (SF) to Bose-glass (BG) quantum phase transition using extensive quantum Monte Carlo simulations of two-dimensional hard-core bosons in a random box potential. T=0 critical properties are studied by thorough finite-size scaling of condensate and SF densities, both vanishing at the same critical disorder Wc=4.80(5). Our results give the following estimates for the critical exponents: z=1.85(15), ν=1.20(12), η=-0.40(15). Furthermore, the probability distribution of the SF response P(lnρSF) displays striking differences across the transition: while it narrows with increasing system sizes L in the SF phase, it broadens in the BG regime, indicating an absence of self-averaging, and at the critical point P(lnρSF+zlnL) is scale invariant. Finally, high-precision measurements of the local density rule out a percolation picture for the SF-BG transition.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Two Scenarios for Quantum Multifractality Breakdown

Rémy Dubertrand; Ignacio Garcia-Mata; Bertrand Georgeot; Olivier Giraud; Gabriel Lemarié; John Martin

We expose two scenarios for the breakdown of quantum multifractality under the effect of perturbations. In the first scenario, multifractality survives below a certain scale of the quantum fluctuations. In the other one, the fluctuations of the wave functions are changed at every scale and each multifractal dimension smoothly goes to the ergodic value. We use as generic examples a one-dimensional dynamical system and the three-dimensional Anderson model at the metal-insulator transition. Based on our results, we conjecture that the sensitivity of quantum multifractality to perturbation is universal in the sense that it follows one of these two scenarios depending on the perturbation. We also discuss the experimental implications.


Nature Communications | 2018

Controlling symmetry and localization with an artificial gauge field in a disordered quantum system

Clément Hainaut; Isam Manai; Jean-François Clément; Jean Claude Garreau; Pascal Szriftgiser; Gabriel Lemarié; Nicolas Cherroret; Dominique Delande; Radu Chicireanu

Anderson localization, the absence of diffusion in disordered media, draws its origins from the destructive interference between multiple scattering paths. The localization properties of disordered systems are expected to be dramatically sensitive to their symmetries. So far, this question has been little explored experimentally. Here we investigate the realization of an artificial gauge field in a synthetic (temporal) dimension of a disordered, periodically driven quantum system. Tuning the strength of this gauge field allows us to control the parity–time symmetry properties of the system, which we probe through the experimental observation of three symmetry-sensitive signatures of localization. The first two are the coherent backscattering, marker of weak localization, and the recently predicted coherent forward scattering, genuine interferential signature of Anderson localization. The third is the direct measurement of the β(g) scaling function in two different symmetry classes, allowing to demonstrate its universality and the one-parameter scaling hypothesis.Periodically kicked rotors are useful in exploring localization phenomenon. Here the authors use ultracold Cs atoms kicked by short laser pulses and show that the periodic modulation results into interference signals as a signature of weak and strong localizations.


Physical Review E | 2017

Chaos-assisted tunneling in the presence of Anderson localization

Elmer V. H. Doggen; Bertrand Georgeot; Gabriel Lemarié

Tunneling between two classically disconnected regular regions can be strongly affected by the presence of a chaotic sea in between. This phenomenon, known as chaos-assisted tunneling, gives rise to large fluctuations of the tunneling rate. Here we study chaos-assisted tunneling in the presence of Anderson localization effects in the chaotic sea. Our results show that the standard tunneling rate distribution is strongly modified by localization, going from the Cauchy distribution in the ergodic regime to a log-normal distribution in the strongly localized case, for both a deterministic and a disordered model. We develop a single-parameter scaling description which accurately describes the numerical data. Several possible experimental implementations using cold atoms, photonic lattices, or microwave billiards are discussed.

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Ignacio Garcia-Mata

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Jean Claude Garreau

Lille University of Science and Technology

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Pascal Szriftgiser

Lille University of Science and Technology

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