Suppressing defect production during passage through a quantum critical point
Abstract
We show that a closed quantum system driven through a quantum critical point with two rates ω1 (which controls its proximity to the quantum critical point) and ω2 (which controls the dispersion of the low-energy quasiparticles at the critical point) exhibits novel scaling laws for defect density n and residual energy Q. We demonstrate suppression of both n and Q with increasing ω2 leading to an alternate route to achieving near-adiabaticity in a finite time for a quantum system during its passage through a critical point. We provide an exact solution for such dynamics with linear drive protocols applied to a class of integrable models, supplement this solution with scaling arguments applicable to generic many-body Hamiltonians, and discuss specific models and experimental systems where our theory may be tested.
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