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Dive into the research topics where Hannes Pichler is active.

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Featured researches published by Hannes Pichler.


Physical Review A | 2010

Nonequilibrium dynamics of bosonic atoms in optical lattices: Decoherence of many-body states due to spontaneous emission

Hannes Pichler; Andrew J. Daley; P. Zoller

We analyze in detail the heating of bosonic atoms in an optical lattice due to incoherent scattering of light from the lasers forming the lattice. Because atoms scattered into higher bands do not thermalize on the time scale of typical experiments, this process cannot be described by the total energy increase in the system alone (which is determined by single-particle effects). The heating instead involves an important interplay between the atomic physics of the heating process and the many-body physics of the state. We characterize the effects on many-body states for various system parameters, where we observe important differences in the heating for strongly and weakly interacting regimes, as well as a strong dependence on the sign of the laser detuning from the excited atomic state. We compute heating rates and changes to characteristic correlation functions based on both perturbation-theory calculations and a time-dependent calculation of the dissipative many-body dynamics. The latter is made possible for one-dimensional systems by combining time-dependent density-matrix-renormalization-group methods with quantum trajectory techniques.


Physical Review A | 2015

Quantum optics of chiral spin networks

Hannes Pichler; Tomás Ramos; Andrew J. Daley; P. Zoller

We study the driven-dissipative dynamics of a network of spin-1/2 systems coupled to one or more chiral 1D bosonic waveguides within the framework of a Markovian master equation. We determine how the interplay between a coherent drive and collective decay processes can lead to the formation of pure multipartite entangled steady states. The key ingredient for the emergence of these many-body dark states is an asymmetric coupling of the spins to left and right propagating guided modes. Such systems are motivated by experimental possibilities with internal states of atoms coupled to optical fibers, or motional states of trapped atoms coupled to a spin-orbit coupled Bose-Einstein condensate. We discuss the characterization of the emerging multipartite entanglement in this system in terms of the Fisher information.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Photonic Circuits with Time Delays and Quantum Feedback.

Hannes Pichler; P. Zoller

We study the dynamics of photonic quantum circuits consisting of nodes coupled by quantum channels. We are interested in the regime where time delay in communication between the nodes is significant. This includes the problem of quantum feedback, where a quantum signal is fed back on a system with a time delay. We develop a matrix product state approach to solve the Quantum Stochastic Schrödinger Equation with time delays, which accounts in an efficient way for the entanglement of nodes with the stream of emitted photons in the waveguide, and thus the nonMarkovian character of the dynamics. We illustrate this approach with two paradigmatic quantum optical examples: two coherently driven distant atoms coupled to a photonic waveguide with a time delay, and a driven atom coupled to its own output field with a time delay as an instance of a quantum feedback problem.We study the dynamics of photonic quantum circuits consisting of nodes coupled by quantum channels. We are interested in the regime where the time delay in communication between the nodes is significant. This includes the problem of quantum feedback, where a quantum signal is fed back on a system with a time delay. We develop a matrix product state approach to solve the quantum stochastic Schrödinger equation with time delays, which accounts in an efficient way for the entanglement of nodes with the stream of emitted photons in the waveguide, and thus the non-Markovian character of the dynamics. We illustrate this approach with two paradigmatic quantum optical examples: two coherently driven distant atoms coupled to a photonic waveguide with a time delay, and a driven atom coupled to its own output field with a time delay as an instance of a quantum feedback problem.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Quantum spin dimers from chiral dissipation in cold-atom chains

Tomás Ramos; Hannes Pichler; Andrew J. Daley; P. Zoller

We consider the nonequilibrium dynamics of a driven dissipative spin chain with chiral coupling to a one-dimensional (1D) bosonic bath, and its atomic implementation with a two-species mixture of cold quantum gases. The reservoir is represented by a spin-orbit coupled 1D quasicondensate of atoms in a magnetized phase, while the spins are identified with motional states of a separate species of atoms in an optical lattice. The chirality of reservoir excitations allows the spins to couple differently to left- and right-moving modes, which in our atomic setup can be tuned from bidirectional to purely unidirectional. Remarkably, this leads to a pure steady state in which pairs of neighboring spins form dimers that decouple from the remainder of the chain. Our results also apply to current experiments with two-level emitters coupled to photonic waveguides.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Quantum State Transfer via Noisy Photonic and Phononic Waveguides

Benoît Vermersch; Pierre-Olivier Guimond; Hannes Pichler; P. Zoller

We describe a quantum state transfer protocol, where a quantum state of photons stored in a first cavity can be faithfully transferred to a second distant cavity via an infinite 1D waveguide, while being immune to arbitrary noise (e.g., thermal noise) injected into the waveguide. We extend the model and protocol to a cavity QED setup, where atomic ensembles, or single atoms representing quantum memory, are coupled to a cavity mode. We present a detailed study of sensitivity to imperfections, and apply a quantum error correction protocol to account for random losses (or additions) of photons in the waveguide. Our numerical analysis is enabled by matrix product state techniques to simulate the complete quantum circuit, which we generalize to include thermal input fields. Our discussion applies both to photonic and phononic quantum networks.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Topological Quantum Optics in Two-Dimensional Atomic Arrays

Johannes Borregaard; Darrick E. Chang; Hannes Pichler; Susanne F. Yelin; P. Zoller; Mikhail D. Lukin; Janos Perczel

We demonstrate that two-dimensional atomic emitter arrays with subwavelength spacing constitute topologically protected quantum optical systems where the photon propagation is robust against large imperfections while losses associated with free space emission are strongly suppressed. Breaking time-reversal symmetry with a magnetic field results in gapped photonic bands with nontrivial Chern numbers and topologically protected, long-lived edge states. Due to the inherent nonlinearity of constituent emitters, such systems provide a platform for exploring quantum optical analogs of interacting topological systems.


Physical Review X | 2016

Measurement Protocol for the Entanglement Spectrum of Cold Atoms

Hannes Pichler; Guanyu Zhu; Alireza Seif; P. Zoller; Mohammad Hafezi

Entanglement, a key aspect of quantum mechanics, is critical to quantum information theory. Researchers theoretically show how cold atoms can be manipulated to measure the entanglement spectrum of a many-body quantum state.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Thermal versus entanglement entropy : a measurement protocol for fermionic atoms with a quantum gas microscope

Hannes Pichler; Lars Bonnes; Andrew J. Daley; Andreas M. Läuchli; P. Zoller

We show how to measure the order-two Renyi entropy of many-body states of spinful fermionic atoms in an optical lattice in equilibrium and non-equilibrium situations. The proposed scheme relies on the possibility to produce and couple two copies of the state under investigation, and to measure the occupation number in a site- and spin-resolved manner, e.g. with a quantum gas microscope. Such a protocol opens the possibility to measure entanglement and test a number of theoretical predictions, such as area laws and their corrections. As an illustration we discuss the interplay between thermal and entanglement entropy for a one dimensional Fermi–Hubbard model at finite temperature, and its possible measurement in an experiment using the present scheme.


Physical Review A | 2016

Quantum Hall physics with cold atoms in cylindrical optical lattices

Mateusz Łącki; Hannes Pichler; Antoine Sterdyniak; A. Lyras; V. E. Lembessis; Omar M. Aldossary; Jan Carl Budich; P. Zoller

We propose and study various realizations of a Hofstadter-Hubbard model on a cylinder geometry with fermionic cold atoms in optical lattices. The cylindrical optical lattice is created by copropagating Laguerre-Gauss beams, i.e.~light beams carrying orbital angular momentum. By strong focusing of the light beams we create a real space optical lattice in the form of rings, which are offset in energy. A second set of Laguerre-Gauss beams then induces a Raman-hopping between these rings, imprinting phases corresponding to a synthetic magnetic field (artificial gauge field). In addition, by rotating the lattice potential, we achieve a slowly varying flux through the hole of the cylinder, which allows us to probe the Hall response of the system as a realization of Laughlins thought experiment. We study how in the presence of interactions fractional quantum Hall physics could be observed in this setup.


Physical Review A | 2013

Heating dynamics of bosonic atoms in a noisy optical lattice

Hannes Pichler; Johannes Schachenmayer; Andrew J. Daley; P. Zoller

We analyze the heating of interacting bosonic atoms in an optical lattice due to intensity fluctuations of the lasers forming the lattice. We focus in particular on fluctuations at low frequencies below the band-gap frequency, such that the dynamics is restricted to the lowest band. We derive stochastic equations of motion, and analyze the effects on different many-body states, characterizing heating processes in both strongly and weakly interacting regimes. In the limit where the noise spectrum is flat at low frequencies, we can derive an effective master equation describing the dynamics. We compute heating rates and changes to characteristic correlation functions both in the perturbation theory limit and using a full time-dependent calculation of the stochastic many-body dynamics in one dimension based on time-dependent density-matrix-renormalization-group methods.

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P. Zoller

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Johannes Schachenmayer

University of Colorado Boulder

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Tomás Ramos

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Benoît Vermersch

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Lars Bonnes

University of Innsbruck

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