Dynamics of Entanglement and the Schmidt Gap in a Driven Light-Matter System

ORAL

Abstract

The ability to modify light-matter coupling in time (e.g. using external pulses) opens up the exciting possibility of generating and probing new aspects of quantum correlations in many-body light-matter systems. In the present work we study the impact of such a pulsed coupling on the light-matter entanglement in the Dicke model as well as the respective subsystem quantum dynamics. Our dynamical many-body analysis exploits the natural partition between the radiation and matter degrees of freedom, allowing us to explore time-dependent intra-subsystem quantum correlations by means of squeezing parameters, and the inter-subsystem Schmidt gap for different pulse duration (i.e. ramping velocity) regimes - from the near adiabatic to the sudden quench limits. Our results reveal that both types of quantities indicate the emergence of the superradiant phase when crossing the quantum critical point. In addition, at the end of the pulse light and matter remain entangled even though they become uncoupled, which could be exploited for engineering protocols to generate entangled states in non-interacting systems.

Presenters

  • Ferney Rodríguez

    Departamento de Física, Universiadad de Los Andes, Departamento de Física, Universidad de Los Andes

Authors

  • Fernando Gómez-Ruiz

    Departamento de Física, Universiadad de Los Andes, Departamento de Física, Universidad de Los Andes

  • Juan Mendoza-Arenas

    Departamento de Física, Universiadad de Los Andes, Departamento de Física, Universidad de Los Andes

  • Ferney Rodríguez

    Departamento de Física, Universiadad de Los Andes, Departamento de Física, Universidad de Los Andes

  • Luis Quiroga

    Departamento de Física, Universiadad de Los Andes, Departamento de Física, Universidad de Los Andes

  • Neil Johnson

    Department of Physics, University of Miami