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Atomic and Laser Physics
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Prof Dieter Jaksch

Professor of Physics

Sub department

  • Atomic and Laser Physics

Research groups

  • Quantum systems engineering
Dieter.Jaksch@physics.ox.ac.uk
  • About
  • Publications

Optical control of the current-voltage relation in stacked superconductors

Physical Review B American Physical Society 100:13 (2019) 134510

Authors:

Frank Schlawin, ASD Dietrich, D Jaksch

Abstract:

We simulate the current-voltage relation of short layered superconductors, which we model as stacks of capacitively coupled Josephson junctions. The system is driven by external laser fields, in order to optically control the voltage drop across the junction. We identify parameter regimes in which supercurrents can be stabilized against thermally induced phase slips, thus reducing the effective voltage across the superconductor. Furthermore, single driven Josephson junctions are known to exhibit phase-locked states, where the superconducting phase is locked to the driving field. We numerically observe their persistence in the presence of thermal fluctuations and capacitive coupling between adjacent Josephson junctions. Our results indicate how macroscopic material properties can be manipulated by exploiting the large optical nonlinearities of Josephson plasmons.
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Symmetries and conservation laws in quantum trajectories: Dissipative freezing

Physical Review A American Physical Society 100:4 (2019) 042113

Authors:

C Sánchez Muñoz, B Buča, J Tindall, A González-Tudela, D Jaksch, D Porras

Abstract:

In driven-dissipative systems, the presence of a strong symmetry guarantees the existence of several steady states belonging to different symmetry sectors. Here we show that, when a system with a strong symmetry is initialized in a quantum superposition involving several of these sectors, each individual stochastic trajectory will randomly select a single one of them and remain there for the rest of the evolution. Since a strong symmetry implies a conservation law for the corresponding symmetry operator on the ensemble level, this selection of a single sector from an initial superposition entails a breakdown of this conservation law at the level of individual realizations. Given that such a superposition is impossible in a classical, stochastic trajectory, this is a a purely quantum effect with no classical analogue. Our results show that a system with a closed Liouvillian gap may exhibit, when monitored over a single run of an experiment, a behaviour completely opposite to the usual notion of dynamical phase coexistence and intermittency, which are typically considered hallmarks of a dissipative phase transition. We discuss our results with a simple, realistic model of squeezed superradiance.
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Cavity-mediated unconventional pairing in ultracold fermionic atoms

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society 123 (2019) 133601

Authors:

Frank Schlawin, D Jaksch
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Heating-Induced Long-Range η Pairing in the Hubbard Model

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society 123:3 (2019) 030603

Authors:

Joseph Tindall, Berislav Buča, Jonathan Coulthard, D Jaksch

Abstract:

We show how, upon heating the spin degrees of freedom of the Hubbard model to infinite temperature, the symmetries of the system allow the creation of steady states with long-range correlations between η pairs. We induce this heating with either dissipation or periodic driving and evolve the system towards a nonequilibrium steady state, a process which melts all spin order in the system. The steady state is identical in both cases and displays distance-invariant off-diagonal η correlations. These correlations were first recognized in the superconducting eigenstates described in Yang’s seminal Letter [Phys. Rev. Lett. 63, 2144 (1989)], which are a subset of our steady states. We show that our results are a consequence of symmetry properties and entirely independent of the microscopic details of the model and the heating mechanism.
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Mott polaritons in cavity-coupled quantum materials

New Journal of Physics IOP Publishing 21 (2019) 073066

Authors:

Martin Kiffner, Jonathan Coulthard, Frank Schlawin, Arzhang Ardavan, Dieter Jaksch

Abstract:

We show that strong electron-electron interactions in quantum materials can give rise to electronic transitions that couple strongly to cavity fields, and collective enhancement of these interactions can result in ultrastrong effective coupling strengths. As a paradigmatic example we consider a Fermi-Hubbard model coupled to a single-mode cavity and find that resonant electron-cavity interactions result in the formation of a quasi-continuum of polariton branches. The vacuum Rabi splitting of the two outermost branches is collectively enhanced and scales with USD g_{\text{eff}}\propto\sqrt{2L} USD, where USD L USD is the number of electronic sites, and the maximal achievable value for USD g_{\text{eff}} USD is determined by the volume of the unit cell of the crystal. We find that USD g_{\text{eff}} USD for existing quantum materials can by far exceed the width of the first excited Hubbard band. This effect can be experimentally observed via measurements of the optical conductivity and does not require ultrastrong coupling on the single-electron level. Quantum correlations in the electronic ground state as well as the microscopic nature of the light-matter interaction enhance the collective light-matter interaction compared to an ensemble of independent two-level atoms interacting with a cavity mode.
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