Spin and energy hydrodynamics in low-dimensional materials

QUEST Center event
No
Speaker
Joel Moore
Date
06/01/2022 - 20:00 - 19:00Add to Calendar 2022-01-06 19:00:00 2022-01-06 20:00:00 Spin and energy hydrodynamics in low-dimensional materials Hydrodynamics can be defined as a description of how many-particle systems evolve from local equilibrium to global equilibrium.  An active question in recent years is how electrons might support new kinds of hydrodynamics in very clean materials.  One-dimensional systems often show special behavior because of additional exact or approximate conservation laws, which can be verified by comparison to DMRG-type simulations.  These can even lead to unexpected scaling behavior: we discuss the origin of unusual subdiffusive Kardar-Parisi-Zhang dynamics in the quantum Heisenberg spin-half chain and its recent experimental observation at fairly high temperatures in KCuF3.  Similar behavior was observed with atoms in a quantum gas microscope.  We then explain how even generic (non-integrable) metals in one dimension can show superdiffusive transport because of a competition between Luttinger liquid physics and thermalization.  Some closing comments review other routes to unconventional hydrodynamics in experiment, including in higher dimensions.   zoom link  zoom - https://zoom.us/j/99663263719 Department of Physics physics.dept@mail.biu.ac.il Asia/Jerusalem public
Place
zoom - https://zoom.us/j/99663263719
Abstract

Hydrodynamics can be defined as a description of how many-particle systems evolve from local equilibrium to global equilibrium.  An active question in recent years is how electrons might support new kinds of hydrodynamics in very clean materials.  One-dimensional systems often show special behavior because of additional exact or approximate conservation laws, which can be verified by comparison to DMRG-type simulations.  These can even lead to unexpected scaling behavior: we discuss the origin of unusual subdiffusive Kardar-Parisi-Zhang dynamics in the quantum Heisenberg spin-half chain and its recent experimental observation at fairly high temperatures in KCuF3.  Similar behavior was observed with atoms in a quantum gas microscope.  We then explain how even generic (non-integrable) metals in one dimension can show superdiffusive transport because of a competition between Luttinger liquid physics and thermalization.  Some closing comments review other routes to unconventional hydrodynamics in experiment, including in higher dimensions.

 

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Last Updated Date : 02/01/2022