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Atomic and Laser Physics
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Professor Andrew Daley

Professor of Quantum Physics

Research theme

  • Quantum information and computation
  • Quantum optics & ultra-cold matter

Sub department

  • Atomic and Laser Physics

Research groups

  • Theory of quantum systems
andrew.daley@physics.ox.ac.uk
Clarendon Laboratory, room 316.3
  • About
  • Publications

Dynamical Disentangling and Cooling of Atoms in Bilayer Optical Lattices.

Physical review letters 120:6 (2018) 060401

Authors:

A Kantian, S Langer, AJ Daley

Abstract:

We show how experimentally available bilayer lattice systems can be used to prepare quantum many-body states with exceptionally low entropy in one layer, by dynamically disentangling the two layers. This disentangling operation moves one layer-subsystem A-into a regime where excitations in A develop a single-particle gap. As a result, this operation maps directly to cooling for subsystem A, with entropy being shuttled to the other layer. For both bosonic and fermionic atoms, we study the corresponding dynamics showing that disentangling can be realized cleanly in ongoing experiments. The corresponding entanglement entropies are directly measurable with quantum gas microscopes, and, as a tool for producing lower-entropy states, this technique opens a range of applications beginning with simplifying production of magnetically ordered states of bosons and fermions.
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Turbulent Mixing Simulation via a Quantum Algorithm

AIAA Journal American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) 56:2 (2018) 1-13

Authors:

Guanglei Xu, Andrew J Daley, Peyman Givi, Rolando D Somma
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Theoretical aspects of analogue quantum simulation with cold atoms

Proceedings of the International School of Physics "Enrico Fermi" 198 (2018) 55-110

Abstract:

In these lectures, we discuss theoretical aspects of analogue quantum simulation, focussing on ultracold atoms in optical lattices as a specific example. We touch on the motivation for quantum simulation, before going into detail on the first-principles microscopic understanding of the system that allows us to use ultra-cold atoms as quantum simulators. This level of understanding and control crucially also exists for the dominant dissipative processes in experiments. We conclude by discussing the verification of quantum simulators, comparison with classical simulations, and the current role of many-body entanglement in this discussion.
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Dynamics of many-body localization in the presence of particle loss

Quantum Science and Technology IOP Publishing 3:1 (2018) 01lt02

Authors:

EPL van Nieuwenburg, J Yago Malo, AJ Daley, MH Fischer
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Probing dynamics in quantum magnetism with ultracold atoms

Optica Publishing Group (2018) jw4a.74

Authors:

Araceli Venegas-Gomez, Andrew J Daley, Wolfgang Ketterle
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