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Dive into the research topics where Walter Hofstetter is active.

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Featured researches published by Walter Hofstetter.


Physical Review Letters | 2002

High-temperature superfluidity of fermionic atoms in optical lattices.

Walter Hofstetter; J. I. Cirac; P. Zoller; Eugene Demler; M. D. Lukin

Fermionic atoms confined in a potential created by standing wave light can undergo a phase transition to a superfluid state at a dramatically increased transition temperature. Depending upon carefully controlled parameters, a transition to a superfluid state of Cooper pairs, antiferromagnetic states or d-wave pairing states can be induced and probed under realistic experimental conditions. We describe an atomic physics experiment that can provide critical insight into the origin of high-temperature superconductivity in cuprates.


Physical Review Letters | 2001

Kondo Correlations and the Fano Effect in Closed Aharonov-Bohm Interferometers

Walter Hofstetter; Jürgen König; Herbert Schoeller

We study the Fano-Kondo effect in a closed Aharonov-Bohm (AB) interferometer which contains a single-level quantum dot and predict a frequency doubling of the AB oscillations as a signature of Kondo-correlated states. Using the Keldysh formalism, the Friedel sum rule, and the numerical renormalization group, we calculate the exact zero-temperature linear conductance G as a function of the AB phase phi and level position epsilon. In the unitary limit, G(phi) reaches its maximum 2e(2)/h at phi = pi/2. We find a Fano-suppressed Kondo plateau for G(epsilon) similar to recent experiments.


Nano Letters | 2010

Electric Field Controlled Magnetic Anisotropy in a Single Molecule

A. S. Zyazin; J. W. G. van den Berg; Edgar A. Osorio; H. S. J. van der Zant; N. P. Konstantinidis; Martin Leijnse; M. R. Wegewijs; Falk May; Walter Hofstetter; Chiara Danieli; Andrea Cornia

We have measured quantum transport through an individual Fe(4) single-molecule magnet embedded in a three-terminal device geometry. The characteristic zero-field splittings of adjacent charge states and their magnetic field evolution are observed in inelastic tunneling spectroscopy. We demonstrate that the molecule retains its magnetic properties and, moreover, that the magnetic anisotropy is significantly enhanced by reversible electron addition/subtraction controlled with the gate voltage. Single-molecule magnetism can thus be electrically controlled.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Quantum-tunneling-induced Kondo effect in single molecular magnets.

C. Romeike; M. R. Wegewijs; Walter Hofstetter; Herbert Schoeller

We consider transport through a single-molecule magnet strongly coupled to metallic electrodes. We demonstrate that, for a half-integer spin of the molecule, electron and spin tunneling cooperate to produce both quantum tunneling of the magnetic moment and a Kondo effect in the linear conductance. The Kondo temperature depends sensitively on the ratio of the transverse and easy-axis anisotropies in a nonmonotonic way. The magnetic symmetry of the transverse anisotropy imposes a selection rule on the total spin for the occurrence of the Kondo effect which deviates from the usual even-odd alternation.


New Journal of Physics | 2003

Phase diagram of two-component bosons on an optical lattice

Ehud Altman; Walter Hofstetter; Eugene Demler; Mikhail D. Lukin

We present a theoretical analysis of the phase diagram of two- component bosons on an optical lattice. An ew formalism is developed which treats the effective spin interactions in th eM ott and superfluid phases on the same footing. Using this new approach we chart the phase boundaries of the broken spin symmetry states up to the Mott to superfluid transition and beyond. Near the transition point, the magnitude of spin exchange can be very large, which facilitates the experimental realization of spin-ordered states. We find that spin and quantum fluctuations have a dramatic effect on the transition, making it first order in extended regions of the phase diagram. When each species is at integer filling, an additional phase transition may occur, from a spin-ordered insulator to aM ott insulator with no broken symmetries. We determine the phase boundaries in this regime and show that this is essentially a Mott transition in the spin sector.


Physical Review Letters | 2003

SU(4) Fermi Liquid State and Spin Filtering in a Double Quantum Dot System

L. Borda; Gergely Zarand; Walter Hofstetter; Bertrand I. Halperin; Jan von Delft

We study a symmetrical double quantum dot (DD) system with strong capacitive interdot coupling using renormalization group methods. The dots are attached to separate leads, and there can be a weak tunneling between them. In the regime where there is a single electron on the DD the low-energy behavior is characterized by an SU(4)-symmetric Fermi liquid theory with entangled spin and charge Kondo correlations and a phase shift pi/4. Application of an external magnetic field gives rise to a large magnetoconductance and a crossover to a purely charge Kondo state in the charge sector with SU(2) symmetry. In a four-lead setup we find perfectly spin-polarized transmission.


Physical Review Letters | 2000

Generalized Numerical Renormalization Group for Dynamical Quantities

Walter Hofstetter

In this paper we introduce a new approach for calculating dynamical properties within the numerical renormalization group. It is demonstrated that the method previously used fails for the Anderson impurity in a magnetic field due to the absence of energy scale separation. The problem is solved by evaluating the Green function with respect to the reduced density matrix of the full system, leading to accurate spectra in agreement with the static magnetization. The new procedure provides a unifying framework for calculating dynamics at any temperature and represents the correct extension of Wilsons original thermodynamic calculation.


Physical Review Letters | 2004

Ultracold fermions and the SU(N) Hubbard model.

Carsten Honerkamp; Walter Hofstetter

We investigate the fermionic SU(N) Hubbard model on the two-dimensional square lattice for weak to moderate interactions using renormalization group and mean-field methods. For the repulsive case U>0 at half filling and small N the dominant tendency is towards breaking of the SU(N) symmetry. For N>6 staggered flux order takes over as the dominant instability, in agreement with the large-N limit. Away from half filling for N=3 two flavors remain half filled by cannibalizing the third flavor. For U<0 and odd N a full Fermi surface coexists with a superconductor. These results may be relevant to future experiments with cold fermionic atoms in optical lattices.


Physical Review Letters | 2001

Quantum phase transition in a multilevel dot.

Walter Hofstetter; Herbert Schoeller

We discuss electronic transport through a lateral quantum dot close to the singlet-triplet degeneracy in the case of a single conduction channel per lead. By applying the numerical renormalization group, we obtain rigorous results for the linear conductance and the density of states. A new quantum phase transition of the Kosterlitz-Thouless-type is found, with an exponentially small energy scale T(*) close to the degeneracy point. Below T(*), the conductance is strongly suppressed, corresponding to a universal dip in the density of states. This explains recent transport measurements.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Color Superfluidity and ''Baryon'' Formation in Ultracold Fermions

Akos Rapp; Gergely Zarand; Carsten Honerkamp; Walter Hofstetter

We study fermionic atoms of three different internal quantum states (colors) in an optical lattice, which are interacting through attractive on site interactions, U<0. Using a variational calculation for equal color densities and small couplings, |U|<|UC|, a color superfluid state emerges with a tendency to domain formation. For |U|>|UC|, triplets of atoms with different colors form singlet fermions (trions). These phases are the analogies of the color superconducting and baryonic phases in QCD. In ultracold fermions, this transition is found to be of second order. Our results demonstrate that quantum simulations with ultracold gases may shed light on outstanding problems in quantum field theory.

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Ulf Bissbort

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Irakli Titvinidze

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Ivana Vasić

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Liang He

Dresden University of Technology

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