Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Maksym Serbyn is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Maksym Serbyn.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Universal slow growth of entanglement in interacting strongly disordered systems.

Maksym Serbyn; Zlatko Papic; Dmitry A. Abanin

Recent numerical work by Bardarson, Pollmann, and Moore revealed a slow, logarithmic in time, growth of the entanglement entropy for initial product states in a putative many-body localized phase. We show that this surprising phenomenon results from the dephasing due to exponentially small interaction-induced corrections to the eigenenergies of different states. For weak interactions, we find that the entanglement entropy grows as ξln(Vt/ℏ), where V is the interaction strength, and ξ is the single-particle localization length. The saturated value of the entanglement entropy at long times is determined by the participation ratios of the initial state over the eigenstates of the subsystem. Our work shows that the logarithmic entanglement growth is a universal phenomenon characteristic of the many-body localized phase in any number of spatial dimensions, and reveals a broad hierarchy of dephasing time scales present in such a phase.


Science | 2013

Observation of Dirac Node Formation and Mass Acquisition in a Topological Crystalline Insulator

Yoshinori Okada; Maksym Serbyn; Hsin Lin; Daniel Walkup; Wenwen Zhou; Chetan Dhital; Madhab Neupane; Su-Yang Xu; Yung Jui Wang; Raman Sankar; Fangcheng Chou; A. Bansil; M. Zahid Hasan; Stephen D. Wilson; Liang Fu; Vidya Madhavan

Half-Massless Certain materials, such as topological crystalline insulators (TCIs), host robust surface states that have a Dirac (graphene-like) dispersion associated with massless carriers; the breaking of protective symmetry within such materials should cause the carriers to acquire mass. Okada et al. (p. 1496, published online 29 August) used scanning tunneling microscopy to map out the energies of the electronic levels of the TCI Pb1-xSnxSe as a function of the strength of an external magnetic field. The massless Dirac fermions coexisted with massive ones, presumably as a consequence of a distortion of the crystalline structure affecting only one of the two mirror symmetries. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy of Pb1–xSnxSe in a magnetic field reveals two types of Dirac fermions. In topological crystalline insulators (TCIs), topology and crystal symmetry intertwine to create surface states with distinct characteristics. The breaking of crystal symmetry in TCIs is predicted to impart mass to the massless Dirac fermions. Here, we report high-resolution scanning tunneling microscopy studies of a TCI, Pb1-xSnxSe that reveal the coexistence of zero-mass Dirac fermions protected by crystal symmetry with massive Dirac fermions consistent with crystal symmetry breaking. In addition, we show two distinct regimes of the Fermi surface topology separated by a Van-Hove singularity at the Lifshitz transition point. Our work paves the way for engineering the Dirac band gap and realizing interaction-driven topological quantum phenomena in TCIs.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Interferometric probes of many-body localization

Maksym Serbyn; Michael Knap; Sarang Gopalakrishnan; Zlatko Papic; Norman Yao; Christopher R. Laumann; Dmitry A. Abanin; Mikhail D. Lukin; Eugene Demler

We propose a method for detecting many-body localization (MBL) in disordered spin systems. The method involves pulsed coherent spin manipulations that probe the dephasing of a given spin due to its entanglement with a set of distant spins. It allows one to distinguish the MBL phase from a noninteracting localized phase and a delocalized phase. In particular, we show that for a properly chosen pulse sequence the MBL phase exhibits a characteristic power-law decay reflecting its slow growth of entanglement. We find that this power-law decay is robust with respect to thermal and disorder averaging, provide numerical simulations supporting our results, and discuss possible experimental realizations in solid-state and cold-atom systems.


Nature Materials | 2015

Dirac mass generation from crystal symmetry breaking on the surfaces of topological crystalline insulators

Ilija Zeljkovic; Yoshinori Okada; Maksym Serbyn; Raman Sankar; Daniel Walkup; Wenwen Zhou; Junwei Liu; Guoqing Chang; Yung Jui Wang; M. Zahid Hasan; Fangcheng Chou; Hsin Lin; A. Bansil; Liang Fu; Vidya Madhavan

The tunability of topological surface states and controllable opening of the Dirac gap are of fundamental and practical interest in the field of topological materials. In the newly discovered topological crystalline insulators (TCIs), theory predicts that the Dirac node is protected by a crystalline symmetry and that the surface state electrons can acquire a mass if this symmetry is broken. Recent studies have detected signatures of a spontaneously generated Dirac gap in TCIs; however, the mechanism of mass formation remains elusive. In this work, we present scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) measurements of the TCI Pb1-xSnxSe for a wide range of alloy compositions spanning the topological and non-topological regimes. The STM topographies reveal a symmetry-breaking distortion on the surface, which imparts mass to the otherwise massless Dirac electrons-a mechanism analogous to the long sought-after Higgs mechanism in particle physics. Interestingly, the measured Dirac gap decreases on approaching the trivial phase, whereas the magnitude of the distortion remains nearly constant. Our data and calculations reveal that the penetration depth of Dirac surface states controls the magnitude of the Dirac mass. At the limit of the critical composition, the penetration depth is predicted to go to infinity, resulting in zero mass, consistent with our measurements. Finally, we discover the existence of surface states in the non-topological regime, which have the characteristics of gapped, double-branched Dirac fermions and could be exploited in realizing superconductivity in these materials.


Physical Review X | 2015

Criterion for Many-Body Localization-Delocalization Phase Transition

Maksym Serbyn; Zlatko Papic; Dmitry A. Abanin

We propose a new approach to probing ergodicity and its breakdown in one-dimensional quantum many-body systems based on their response to a local perturbation. We study the distribution of matrix elements of a local operator between the system’s eigenstates, finding a qualitatively different behavior in the many-body localized (MBL) and ergodic phases. To characterize how strongly a local perturbation modifies the eigenstates, we introduce the parameter G(L)=⟨ln(Vnm/δ)⟩, which represents the disorder-averaged ratio of a typical matrix element of a local operator V to energy level spacing δ; this parameter is reminiscent of the Thouless conductance in the single-particle localization. We show that the parameter G(L) decreases with system size L in the MBL phase and grows in the ergodic phase. We surmise that the delocalization transition occurs when G(L) is independent of system size, G(L)=Gc∼1. We illustrate our approach by studying the many-body localization transition and resolving the many-body mobility edge in a disordered one-dimensional XXZ spin-1/2 chain using exact diagonalization and time-evolving block-decimation methods. Our criterion for the MBL transition gives insights into microscopic details of transition. Its direct physical consequences, in particular, logarithmically slow transport at the transition and extensive entanglement entropy of the eigenstates, are consistent with recent renormalization-group predictions.


Physical Review B | 2016

Spectral statistics across the many-body localization transition

Maksym Serbyn; Joel E. Moore

The many-body localization transition (MBLT) between ergodic and many-body localized phases in disordered interacting systems is a subject of much recent interest. The statistics of eigenenergies is known to be a powerful probe of crossovers between ergodic and integrable systems in simpler examples of quantum chaos. We consider the evolution of the spectral statistics across the MBLT, starting with mapping to a Brownian motion process that analytically relates the spectral properties to the statistics of matrix elements. We demonstrate that the flow from Wigner-Dyson to Poisson statistics is a two-stage process. First, a fractal enhancement of matrix elements upon approaching the MBLT from the delocalized side produces an effective power-law interaction between energy levels, and leads to a plasma model for level statistics. At the second stage, the gas of eigenvalues has local interactions and the level statistics belongs to a semi-Poisson universality class. We verify our findings numerically on the XXZ spin chain. We provide a microscopic understanding of the level statistics across the MBLT and discuss implications for the transition that are strong constraints on possible theories.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Quantum quenches in the many-body localized phase

Maksym Serbyn; Z. Papi; Dmitry A. Abanin

Many-body localized (MBL) systems are characterized by the absence of transport and thermalization, and therefore cannot be described by conventional statistical mechanics. In this paper, using analytic arguments and numerical simulations, we study the behaviour of local observables in an isolated MBL system following a quantum quench. For the case of a global quench, we find that the local observables reach stationary, highly non-thermal values at long times as a result of slow dephasing characteristic of the MBL phase. These stationary values retain the local memory of the initial state due to the existence of local integrals of motion in the MBL phase. The temporal fluctuations around stationary values exhibit universal power-law decay in time, with an exponent set by the localization length and the diagonal entropy of the initial state. Such a power-law decay holds for any local observable and is related to the logarithmic in time growth of entanglement in the MBL phase. This behaviour distinguishes the MBL phase from both the Anderson insulator (where no stationary state is reached), and from the ergodic phase (where relaxation is expected to be exponential). For the case of a local quench, we also find a power-law approach of local observables to their stationary values when the system is prepared in a mixed state. Quench protocols considered in this paper can be naturally implemented in systems of ultra cold atoms in disordered optical lattices, and the behaviour of local observables provides a direct experimental signature of many-body localization.


Nature Physics | 2014

Mapping the unconventional orbital texture in topological crystalline insulators

Ilija Zeljkovic; Yoshinori Okada; C. L. Huang; Raman Sankar; Daniel Walkup; Wenwen Zhou; Maksym Serbyn; Fangcheng Chou; Wei-Feng Tsai; Hsin Lin; A. Bansil; Liang Fu; M. Zahid Hasan; Vidya Madhavan

In crystalline topological insulators, the combination of an insulating bulk with conducting surface states is due to particular crystal symmetry. The associated Dirac cones—linear crossings in the electronic band structure—exhibit non-trivial orbital textures that have now been probed by means of scanning tunnelling spectroscopy.


Physical Review B | 2014

Symmetry breaking and Landau quantization in topological crystalline insulators

Maksym Serbyn; Liang Fu

In the recently discovered topological crystalline insulators SnTe and


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Power-law entanglement spectrum in many-body localized phases

Maksym Serbyn; Alexios A. Michailidis; Dmitry A. Abanin; Zlatko Papic

{\mathrm{Pb}}_{1\ensuremath{-}x}{\mathrm{Sn}}_{x}

Collaboration


Dive into the Maksym Serbyn's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dmitry A. Abanin

Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patrick A. Lee

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Liang Fu

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kenji Watanabe

National Institute for Materials Science

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge