Generation of Ultrahigh Anomalous Hall Conductivities via Optimally Prepared Topological Floquet States
POSTER
Abstract
Ultrafast quantum matter experiments have validated predictions from Floquet theory, in particular, the dynamical modification of the electronic band structure and the light-induced anomalous Hall effect, via monotonic modulation of the driving amplitude. Here, we demonstrate how new physics may be uncovered by leveraging quantum optimal control techniques to design Floquet amplitude-modulation profiles. We unlock a fundamentally different regime of topological transport, whereby the optimal oscillatory preparation protocol functions as a non-adiabatic topological pump: as a result, ultrahigh time-averaged anomalous Hall conductivities emerge, that reach up to around seventy times the values one would expect from the Chern number of the targeted Floquet state. The optimal protocols achieve >99% fidelity at the topological energy gap closing point — a twenty-fold improvement over standard monotonic approaches in as little as ten Floquet cycles — while unexpectedly generating the ultrahigh conductivities. Our findings demonstrate that optimally prepared non-equilibrium quantum states can access transport regimes not achievable in the corresponding equilibrium system or even by applying conventional Floquet approaches, opening new avenues for ultrafast quantum technologies and topological device applications.
*Work at Dartmouth College was supported by the NSF under grant No. OIA-1921199 and the ARO through US MURI Grant No. W911NF1810218. Work at Northeastern University was supported as part of the Center for Molecular Magnetic Quantum Materials, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences under Award No. DE-SC0019330.
Publication: Generation of Ultrahigh Anomalous Hall Conductivities via Optimally Prepared Topological Floquet States, A. Cupo et al., In Preparation
Presenters
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Andrew Cupo
- Northeastern University