2012
DOI: 10.1103/physreva.86.023604
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Quantum charge glasses of itinerant fermions with cavity-mediated long-range interactions

Abstract: The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters. We study models of itinerant spinless fermions with random long-range interactions. We motivate such models from descriptions of fermionic atoms in multi-mode optical cavities. The solution of an infinite-range model yields a metallic phase which has glassy charge dynamics, and a localized glass phase with suppressed density of states at low energies. We compare these phases to the conve… Show more

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Cited by 58 publications
(91 citation statements)
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“…We believe that our Keldysh approach allows an easier comparison with other equilibrium and non-equilibrium (classical and quantum) systems. While some of the results presented here are actually new, and not just known results re-phrased in a new approach, the full utility of our approach will become clear then computing thermodynamics and critical properties of large, open systems with spatially fluctuating degrees of freedom such as disorder [12,14]. In these correlated quantum many-body situations, Master equation approaches are typically limited to relatively small number of atoms and a recipe to compute disorder-averaged quantities does not seem to exist.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…We believe that our Keldysh approach allows an easier comparison with other equilibrium and non-equilibrium (classical and quantum) systems. While some of the results presented here are actually new, and not just known results re-phrased in a new approach, the full utility of our approach will become clear then computing thermodynamics and critical properties of large, open systems with spatially fluctuating degrees of freedom such as disorder [12,14]. In these correlated quantum many-body situations, Master equation approaches are typically limited to relatively small number of atoms and a recipe to compute disorder-averaged quantities does not seem to exist.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the future, it will be interesting to apply our approach to dissipative quantum glasses coupled to Markovian (and other) baths such as potentially achievable in multi-mode optical cavities [12][13][14] or circuit QED [58]. It would also be desirable to obtain a more general classification of conditions under which quantum phase transitions of closed systems are turned into thermal phase transitions by dissipation-and perhaps to find counterexamples by engineered dissipation along the lines of Refs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Above a critical pump strength, the occupation of the cavity mode is stabilized and the bosonic atoms organize into a checkerboard density pattern [12]. Many different proposals have been put forward to realize the self-organization of more complex quantum phases [13] reaching from the Mott-insulator [15] over fermionic phases [16][17][18][19][20] and disordered structures [21][22][23][24] to phases with spin-orbit coupling [25][26][27].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This motivates the realization of dipolar quantum spin glasses in a well-isolated setting with long coherence times. Although there have been proposals to mimic the properties of spin and charge glasses using ultracold atoms coupled to multimode cavities [8][9][10][11] , it is also desirable to naturally realize a spin glass using only bare dipolar interactions. Such a realization would amount to a "quantum simulator" and could shed light on the dynamical properties of quantum glasses 4 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%