Condensed Matter Seminar: Thwarting long-lived dark states to speed up dynamic polarization
Anushya Chandran, Boston University
Zoom: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86034538539
Abstract:
Long-lived dark states, in which an experimentally accessible qubit is not in thermal equilibrium with a surrounding spin bath, are pervasive in solid-state systems. In the first half of the talk, I will explain the ubiquity of dark states in a large class of inhomogenous central spin models using the proximity to integrable lines with exact dark eigenstates.
I will develop a picture of the eigenstates away from the integrable lines in terms of many-body resonances, and argue that relaxation times are exponentially large in system size at accessible sizes.
Long-lived dark states stymie hyperpolarization protocols that aim to transfer spin polarization from the central qubit to the surrounding spin bath. In the second half of the talk, I will describe fast and efficient hyperpolarization protocols that exploit certain integrability-breaking terms to reduce the statistical weight on dark states. These protocols use approximate counter-diabatic driving and are experimentally accessible through Floquet engineering.
Event Organizer: Prof. Eran Sela