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Dive into the research topics where Kartiek Agarwal is active.

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Featured researches published by Kartiek Agarwal.


Physical Review B | 2016

Griffiths effects and slow dynamics in nearly many-body localized systems

Sarang Gopalakrishnan; Kartiek Agarwal; Eugene Demler; David A. Huse; Michael Knap

The low-frequency response of systems near a many-body localization transition can be dominated by rare regions that are locally critical or “in the other phase.” It is known that in one dimension, these rare regions can cause the dc conductivity and diffusion constant to vanish even inside the delocalized thermal phase. Here, we present a general analysis of such Griffiths effects in the thermal phase near the many-body localization transition: we consider both one-dimensional and higher-dimensional systems, subject to quenched randomness, and discuss both linear response (including the frequency- and wave-vector-dependent conductivity) and more general dynamics. In all the regimes we consider, we identify observables that are dominated by rare-region effects. In some cases (one-dimensional systems and Floquet systems with no extensive conserved quantities), essentially all long-time local observables are dominated by rare-region effects; in others, generic observables are instead dominated by hydrodynamic long-time tails throughout the thermal phase, and one must look at specific probes, such as spin echo, to see Griffiths behavior.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Chiral Prethermalization in Supersonically Split Condensates

Kartiek Agarwal; Emanuele G. Dalla Torre; Bernhard Rauer; Tim Langen; Jörg Schmiedmayer; Eugene Demler

We study the dynamics of phase relaxation between a pair of one-dimensional condensates created by a supersonic unzipping of a single condensate. We use the Lorentz invariance of the low energy sector of such systems to show that dephasing results in an unusual prethermal state, in which right- and left-moving excitations have different, Doppler-shifted temperatures. The chirality of these modes can be probed experimentally by measuring the interference fringe contrasts with the release point of the split condensates moving at another supersonic velocity. Further, an accelerated motion of the release point can be used to observe a spacelike analog of the Unruh effect. A concrete experimental realization of the quantum zipper for a BEC of trapped atoms on an atom chip is outlined.


Physical Review B | 2013

Polaronic model of two-level systems in amorphous solids

Kartiek Agarwal; Ivar Martin; Mikhail D. Lukin; Eugene Demler

While two-level systems (TLSs) are ubiqitous in solid state systems, microscopic understanding of their nature remains an outstanding problem. Conflicting phenomenological models are used to describe TLSs in seemingly similar materials when probed with different experimental techniques. Specifically, bulk measurements in amorphous solids have been interpreted using the model of a tunneling atom or group of atoms, whereas TLSs observed in the insulating barriers of Josephson junction qubits have been understood in terms of tunneling of individual electrons. Motivated by recent experiments studying TLSs in Josephson junctions, especially the effects of elastic strain on TLS properties, we analyze the interaction of the electronic TLS with phonons. We demonstrate that strong polaronic effects lead to dramatic changes in TLS properties. Our model gives a quantitative understanding of the TLS relaxation and dephasing as probed in Josephson junction qubits, while providing an alternative interpretation of bulk experiments. We demonstrate that a model of polaron dressed electronic TLS leads to estimates for the density and distribution of parameters of TLSs consistent with bulk experiments in amorphous solids. This model explains such surprising observations of recent experiments as the existence of minima in the energy of some TLSs as a function of strain and makes concrete predictions for the character of TLS dephasing near such minima. We argue that better understanding of the microscopic nature of TLSs can be used to improve properties of quantum devices, from an enhancement of relaxation time of TLSs to creating new types of strongly interacting optomechanical systems.


Physical Review B | 2017

Localization and transport in a strongly driven Anderson insulator

Kartiek Agarwal; Sriram Ganeshan; R. N. Bhatt

We study localization and charge dynamics in a monochromatically driven one-dimensional Anderson insulator focussing on the low-frequency, strong-driving regime. We study this problem using a mapping of the Floquet Hamiltonian to a hopping problem with correlated disorder in one higher harmonic-space dimension. We show that (i) resonances in this model correspond to \emph{adiabatic} Landau-Zener (LZ) transitions that occur due to level crossings between lattice sites over the course of dynamics; (ii) the proliferation of these resonances leads to dynamics that \emph{appear} diffusive over a single drive cycle, but the system always remains localized; (iii) actual charge transport occurs over many drive cycles due to slow dephasing between these LZ orbits and is logarithmic-in-time, with a crucial role being played by far-off Mott-like resonances; and (iv) applying a spatially-varying random phase to the drive tends to decrease localization, suggestive of weak-localization physics. We derive the conditions for the strong driving regime, determining the parametric dependencies of the size of Floquet eigenstates, and time-scales associated with the dynamics, and corroborate the findings using both numerical scaling collapses and analytical arguments.


Physical Review B | 2017

Magnetic noise spectroscopy as a probe of local electronic correlations in two-dimensional systems

Kartiek Agarwal; R. Schmidt; Bertrand I. Halperin; Vadim Oganesyan; Gergely Zarand; Mikhail D. Lukin; Eugene Demler

We develop the theoretical framework for calculating magnetic noise from conducting two-dimensional (2D) materials. We describe how local measurements of this noise can directly probe the wave-vector dependent transport properties of the material over a broad range of length scales, thus providing new insight into a range of correlated phenomena in 2D electronic systems. As an example, we demonstrate how transport in the hydrodynamic regime in an electronic system exhibits a unique signature in the magnetic noise profile that distinguishes it from diffusive and ballistic transport and how it can be used to measure the viscosity of the electronic fluid. We employ a Boltzmann approach in a two-time relaxation-time approximation to compute the conductivity of graphene and quantitatively illustrate these transport regimes and the experimental feasibility of observing them. Next, we discuss signatures of isolated impurities lodged inside the conducting 2D material. The noise near an impurity is found to be suppressed compared to the background by an amount that is directly proportional to the cross-section of electrons/holes scattering off of the impurity. We use these results to outline an experimental proposal to measure the temperature dependent level shift and linewidth of the resonance associated with an Anderson impurity.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Anomalous diffusion and griffiths effects near the many-body localization transition.

Kartiek Agarwal; Sarang Gopalakrishnan; Michael Knap; Markus Müller; Eugene Demler


Physical Review B | 2015

1 / f α noise and generalized diffusion in random Heisenberg spin systems

Kartiek Agarwal; Eugene Demler; Ivar Martin


Physical Review B | 2017

Quantum heat waves in a one-dimensional condensate

Kartiek Agarwal; Emanuele G. Dalla Torre; Jörg Schmiedmayer; Eugene Demler


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2018

Probing one-dimensional systems via noise magnetometry with single spin qubits

Joaquin F. Rodriguez-Nieva; Kartiek Agarwal; Thierry Giamarchi; Bertrand I. Halperin; Mikhail D. Lukin; Eugene Demler


Physical Review Letters | 2018

Fast Preparation of Critical Ground States Using Superluminal Fronts

Kartiek Agarwal; R. N. Bhatt; S. L. Sondhi

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Ivar Martin

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Jörg Schmiedmayer

Vienna University of Technology

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Gergely Zarand

Budapest University of Technology and Economics

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