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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

Corrigendum: Two-way interconversion of millimeter-wave and optical fields in Rydberg gases (2016 New J. Phys. 18 093030)

New Journal of Physics (2016)

Authors:

Martin Kiffner, A Feizpour, KT Kaczmarek, Dieter Jaksch, J Nunn
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Quantum mechanical calculation of Rydberg-Rydberg autoionization rates

Journal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics Institute of Physics 49:20 (2016) 204004

Authors:

Martin R Kiffner, Davide Ceresoli, Wenhui Li, Dieter Jaksch

Abstract:

We present quantum mechanical calculations of autoionization rates for two Rubidium Rydberg atoms with weakly overlapping electron clouds. We neglect exchange effects and consider tensor products of independent atom states forming an approximate basis of the two-electron state space. We consider large sets of two-atom states with randomly chosen quantum numbers and find that the charge overlap between the two Rydberg electrons allows one to characterise the magnitude of the autoionization rates. If the electron clouds overlap by more than one percent, the autoionization rates increase approximately exponentially with the charge overlap. This finding is independent of the energy of the initial state.
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Non-linear quantum-classical scheme to simulate non-equilibrium strongly correlated fermionic many-body dynamics

Scientific Reports Nature Publishing Group 6 (2016) 32940

Authors:

Juha M Kreula, Stephen R Clark, Dieter Jaksch

Abstract:

We propose a non-linear, hybrid quantum-classical scheme for simulating non-equilibrium dynamics of strongly correlated fermions described by the Hubbard model in a Bethe lattice in the thermodynamic limit. Our scheme implements non-equilibrium dynamical mean field theory (DMFT) and uses a digital quantum simulator to solve a quantum impurity problem whose parameters are iterated to self-consistency via a classically computed feedback loop where quantum gate errors can be partly accounted for. We analyse the performance of the scheme in an example case.
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Few-qubit quantum-classical simulation of strongly correlated lattice fermions

EPJ Quantum Technology Springer 3 (2016)

Authors:

Juha M Kreula, Laura García-Álvarez, Lucas Lamata, Stephen R Clark, Enrique Solano, Dieter Jaksch

Abstract:

We study a proof-of-principle example of the recently proposed hybrid quantum-classical simulation of strongly correlated fermion models in the thermodynamic limit. In a “two-site” dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT) approach we reduce the Hubbard model to an effective impurity model subject to self-consistency conditions. The resulting minimal two-site representation of the non-linear hybrid setup involves four qubits implementing the impurity problem, plus an ancilla qubit on which all measurements are performed. We outline a possible implementation with superconducting circuits feasible with near-future technology.
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Light-induced superconductivity in metallic K3C60

Optics InfoBase Conference Papers (2016)

Authors:

A Cantaluppi, M Mitrano, D Nicoletti, S Kaiser, A Perucchi, S Lupi, P Di Pietro, D Pontiroli, M Riccò, SR Clark, D Jaksch, A Cavalleri

Abstract:

Resonant excitation of local molecular vibrations at mid-infrared wavelengths is shown to induce a transient superconducting state in the organic superconductor K3C60 for temperatures far above the equilibrium critical temperature.
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