2–7 Jun 2019
Simon Fraser University
America/Vancouver timezone
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Qubits as edge state detectors: illustration using the SSH model

3 Jun 2019, 11:15
30m
SCB 9242 (Simon Fraser University)

SCB 9242

Simon Fraser University

Invited Speaker / Conférencier(ère) invité(e) Theoretical Physics / Physique théorique (DTP-DPT) M1-4 Mathematical Physics (DTP) | Physique mathématique (DPT)

Speaker

Richard MacKenzie (U. Montréal)

Description

As is well-known, qubits are the fundamental building blocks of quantum computers, and more generally, of quantum information. A major challenge in the development of quantum devices arises because the information content in any quantum state is rather fragile, as no system is completely isolated from its environment; generally, such interactions degrade the quantum state, resulting in a loss of information.

Topological states are promising in this regard because they are in ways more robust against noise and decoherence. But creating and detecting edge states can be challenging. We describe a composite system consisting of a two-state system (the qubit) interacting with an SSH chain (a hopping model with alternating hopping parameters). In this model, the dynamics of the qubit changes dramatically depending on whether or not an edge state exists. Thus, the qubit can be used to determine whether or not an edge state exists in this model.

Authors

Richard MacKenzie (U. Montréal) Meri Zaimi (U. Montréal) Christian Boudreault (Collège militaire royal de Saint-Jean) Hichem Eleuch (Abu Dhabi University) Michael Hilke (U. McGill)

Presentation materials