Quantum Surfing - Pushing a Particle through a Rough Potential

ORAL

Abstract

Quantum machines rely on our ability to manipulate the motion of electrons. We investigate the transport of particles by a travelling potential pulse in a one-dimensional system with quenched disorder, dissipation, and thermal noise. We simulate finite temperature and dissipation by applying the Schrodinger-Langevin equation to a single-particle hopping model. The transport is understood as a semiclassical Fokker-Planck diffusion process in the pulse frame. The semiclassical behavior arises from decoherence due to the dissipation and thermal noise. We predict that the "surfing length", our measure of transport, is exponential with pulse width. Measurements agree with drift velocities and diffusivities from simulations with a constant DC field, in the regime of high disorder and thermal noise. We also introduce an alternative nonlinear dissipative term which allows for generalization to higher dimensions and many-body systems.

*Funding for this research was provided by the Institute for Quantum Information and Matter, a National Science Frontier center partially funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. DM was funded by the David L. Goodstein SURF Fellowship, Caltech SFP. SS was funded by a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship under Grant No. DGE-1745301.

Presenters

  • Daniel Mark

    • Physics, Caltech

Authors

  • Daniel Mark

    • Physics, Caltech
  • Samuel F Savitz

    • Physics, Caltech
  • Gil Refael

    • California Institute of Technology
    • Caltech
    • Institute for Quantum Information and Matter, Caltech
    • Department of Physics and Institute for Quantum Information and Matter, California Institute of Technology