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Author

Andreas Eberlein

Other affiliations: Max Planck Society
Bio: Andreas Eberlein is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Superconductivity & Fermi surface. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 9 publications receiving 335 citations. Previous affiliations of Andreas Eberlein include Max Planck Society.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the nonequilibrium quench dynamics of the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev models of fermions with random all-to-all interactions and provide tractable models of the dynamics of quantum systems without quasiparticle excitations.
Abstract: We describe the nonequilibrium quench dynamics of the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev models of fermions with random all-to-all interactions. These provide tractable models of the dynamics of quantum systems without quasiparticle excitations. The Kadanoff-Baym equations show that, at long times, the fermion two-point function has a thermal form at a final temperature determined by energy conservation, and the numerical analysis is consistent with a thermalization rate proportional to this temperature. We also obtain an exact analytic solution of the quench dynamics in the large $q$ limit of a model with $q$ fermion interactions: in this limit, the thermalization of the two-point function is instantaneous.

140 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The calculations reveal further coexistence regions where superconductivity is accompanied by incommensurate magnetic order, in addition to previously established regions of Néel order coexisting with d-wavesuperconductivity.
Abstract: We analyze the competition of magnetism and superconductivity in the two-dimensional Hubbard model with a moderate interaction strength, including the possibility of incommensurate spiral magnetic order. Using an unbiased renormalization group approach, we compute magnetic and superconducting order parameters in the ground state. In addition to previously established regions of Neel order coexisting with d-wave superconductivity, the calculations reveal further coexistence regions where superconductivity is accompanied by incommensurate magnetic order.

64 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that a Fermi surface reconstruction due to spiral antiferromagnetic order may explain the rapid change in the Hall number as recently observed near optimal doping in cuprate superconductors.
Abstract: We show that a Fermi surface reconstruction due to spiral antiferromagnetic order may explain the rapid change in the Hall number as recently observed near optimal doping in cuprate superconductors [Badoux et al., Nature (London) 531, 210 (2016)]. The single-particle spectral function in the spiral state exhibits hole pockets which look like Fermi arcs due to a strong momentum dependence of the spectral weight. Adding charge-density wave order further reduces the Fermi surface to a single electron pocket. We propose quantum oscillation measurements to distinguish between commensurate and spiral antiferromagnetic order. Similar results apply to certain metals in which topological order replaces antiferromagnetic order.

53 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the Ising-nematic critical point was studied using the controlled dimensional regularization method proposed by Dalidovich and Lee, and it was shown that hyperscaling is violated, with $\ensuremath{\theta}=1$ in $d=2.
Abstract: Understanding optical conductivity data in the optimally doped cuprates in the framework of quantum criticality requires a strongly coupled quantum critical metal which violates hyperscaling. In the simplest scaling framework, hyperscaling violation can be characterized by a single nonzero exponent $\ensuremath{\theta}$, so that in a spatially isotropic state in $d$ spatial dimensions, the specific heat scales with temperature as ${T}^{(d\ensuremath{-}\ensuremath{\theta})/z}$, and the optical conductivity scales with frequency as ${\ensuremath{\omega}}^{(d\ensuremath{-}\ensuremath{\theta}\ensuremath{-}2)/z}$ for $\ensuremath{\omega}\ensuremath{\gg}T$, where $z$ is the dynamic critical exponent defined by the scaling of the fermion response function transverse to the Fermi surface. We study the Ising-nematic critical point, using the controlled dimensional regularization method proposed by Dalidovich and Lee [Phys. Rev. B 88, 245106 (2013)]. We find that hyperscaling is violated, with $\ensuremath{\theta}=1$ in $d=2$. We expect that similar results apply to Fermi surfaces coupled to gauge fields in $d=2$.

52 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a theory for light-induced superconductivity in underdoped cuprates in which the competing bond-density wave order is suppressed by driving phonons with light.
Abstract: We develop a theory for light-induced superconductivity in underdoped cuprates in which the competing bond-density wave order is suppressed by driving phonons with light. Close to a bond-density wave instability in a system with a small Fermi surface, such as a fractionalized Fermi liquid, we show that the coupling of electrons to phonons is strongly enhanced at the bond-density wave ordering wave vectors, leading to a strong softening of phonons at these wave vectors. For a model of classical phonons with anharmonic couplings, we show that the combination of strong softening and driving can lead to large phonon oscillations. When coupled to a phenomenological model describing the competition between bond-density wave order and superconductivity, these phonon oscillations melt bond-density wave order, thereby enhancing pairing correlations.

45 citations


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Journal Article
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that a homogeneous 1D Bose gas with point-like collisional interactions is integrable, and that it is possible to construct a system with many degrees of freedom that does not reach thermal equilibrium even after thousands of collisions.
Abstract: It is a fundamental assumption of statistical mechanics that a closed system with many degrees of freedom ergodically samples all equal energy points in phase space. To understand the limits of this assumption, it is important to find and study systems that are not ergodic, and thus do not reach thermal equilibrium. A few complex systems have been proposed that are expected not to thermalize because their dynamics are integrable. Some nearly integrable systems of many particles have been studied numerically, and shown not to ergodically sample phase space. However, there has been no experimental demonstration of such a system with many degrees of freedom that does not approach thermal equilibrium. Here we report the preparation of out-of-equilibrium arrays of trapped one-dimensional (1D) Bose gases, each containing from 40 to 250 87Rb atoms, which do not noticeably equilibrate even after thousands of collisions. Our results are probably explainable by the well-known fact that a homogeneous 1D Bose gas with point-like collisional interactions is integrable. Until now, however, the time evolution of out-of-equilibrium 1D Bose gases has been a theoretically unsettled issue, as practical factors such as harmonic trapping and imperfectly point-like interactions may compromise integrability. The absence of damping in 1D Bose gases may lead to potential applications in force sensing and atom interferometry.

941 citations

Book
16 Mar 2018
TL;DR: In this paper, a review of theories of states of quantum matter without quasiparticle excitations is provided through a holographic duality with gravitational theories in an emergent spatial dimension.
Abstract: We present a review of theories of states of quantum matter without quasiparticle excitations. Solvable examples of such states are provided through a holographic duality with gravitational theories in an emergent spatial dimension. We review the duality between gravitational backgrounds and the various states of quantum matter which live on the boundary. We then describe quantum matter at a fixed commensurate density (often described by conformal field theories), and also compressible quantum matter with variable density, providing an extensive discussion of transport in both cases. We present a unified discussion of the holographic theory of transport with memory matrix and hydrodynamic methods, allowing a direct connection to experimentally realized quantum matter. We also explore other important challenges in non-quasiparticle physics, including symmetry broken phases such as superconductors and non-equilibrium dynamics.

484 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 2017-Science
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors combine the latest numerical methods in exhaustive simulations, uncovering the ordering in the underdoped ground state of correlated electron materials, including the high-temperature superconductors.
Abstract: Competing inhomogeneous orders are a central feature of correlated electron materials, including the high-temperature superconductors. The two-dimensional Hubbard model serves as the canonical microscopic physical model for such systems. Multiple orders have been proposed in the underdoped part of the phase diagram, which corresponds to a regime of maximum numerical difficulty. By combining the latest numerical methods in exhaustive simulations, we uncover the ordering in the underdoped ground state. We find a stripe order that has a highly compressible wavelength on an energy scale of a few kelvin, with wavelength fluctuations coupled to pairing order. The favored filled stripe order is different from that seen in real materials. Our results demonstrate the power of modern numerical methods to solve microscopic models, even in challenging settings.

417 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The nonperturbative functional renormalization-group (FRG) approach as discussed by the authors is a modern implementation of Wilson's RG, which allows one to set up nonperturative approximation schemes that go beyond the standard perturbative RG approaches.

253 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: In this paper, a nearly-$AdS_2$ solution describing an eternal traversable wormhole was constructed, which contains negative null energy generated by quantum fields under the influence of an external coupling between the two boundaries.
Abstract: We construct a nearly-$AdS_2$ solution describing an eternal traversable wormhole. The solution contains negative null energy generated by quantum fields under the influence of an external coupling between the two boundaries. In parallel, we discuss two SYK systems coupled by a relevant interaction. The physics of the two cases is very similar. They both share a "gravitational" subsector which is identical. The solution within this subsector sets the stage for dynamics which is almost conformal invariant. We study this system in detail, both in gravity and in the SYK model. The coupled SYK models have an interesting phase diagram at finite temperature, displaying the usual Hawking-Page transition between the thermal AdS phase at low temperature and the black hole phase at high temperature. Interestingly, these two phases are continuously connected in the microcannonical ensemble.

239 citations