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1.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 3512, 2023 Jun 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37316515

ABSTRACT

Characterizing and controlling entanglement in quantum materials is crucial for the development of next-generation quantum technologies. However, defining a quantifiable figure of merit for entanglement in macroscopic solids is theoretically and experimentally challenging. At equilibrium the presence of entanglement can be diagnosed by extracting entanglement witnesses from spectroscopic observables and a nonequilibrium extension of this method could lead to the discovery of novel dynamical phenomena. Here, we propose a systematic approach to quantify the time-dependent quantum Fisher information and entanglement depth of transient states of quantum materials with time-resolved resonant inelastic x-ray scattering. Using a quarter-filled extended Hubbard model as an example, we benchmark the efficiency of this approach and predict a light-enhanced many-body entanglement due to the proximity to a phase boundary. Our work sets the stage for experimentally witnessing and controlling entanglement in light-driven quantum materials via ultrafast spectroscopic measurements.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 125(18): 187202, 2020 Oct 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33196266

ABSTRACT

We analyze a quantum-classical hybrid system of steadily precessing around the fixed axis slow classical localized magnetic moments (LMMs), forming a head-to-head domain wall, surrounded by fast electrons driven out of equilibrium by LMMs and residing within a metallic wire whose connection to macroscopic reservoirs makes electronic quantum system an open one. The model captures the essence of dynamical noncollinear magnetic textures encountered in spintronics, while making it possible to obtain the exact time-dependent nonequilibrium density matrix of electronic systems and split it into four contributions. The Fermi surface contribution generates dissipative (or dampinglike in spintronics terminology) spin torque on LMMs, as the counterpart of electronic friction in nonadiabatic molecular dynamics (MD). Among two Fermi sea contributions, one generates geometric torque dominating in the adiabatic regime, which remains as the only nonzero contribution in a closed system with disconnected reservoirs. Locally geometric torque can have nondissipative (or fieldlike in spintronics terminology) component, acting as the counterpart of geometric magnetism force in nonadiabatic MD, as well as a much smaller dampinglike component acting as "geometric friction." Such current-independent geometric torque is absent from widely used micromagnetics or atomistic spin dynamics modeling of magnetization dynamics based on the Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation, while previous analyses of how to include our Fermi-surface dampinglike torque have severely underestimated its total magnitude.

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