Topological fingerprints in Liouvillian gaps
Topology in many-body physics usually emerges as a feature of equilibrium quantum states. We show that topological fingerprints can also appear in the relaxation rates of open quantum systems. To demonstrate this we consider one of the simplest models that has two topologically distinct phases in it...
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Zusammenfassung: | Topology in many-body physics usually emerges as a feature of equilibrium
quantum states. We show that topological fingerprints can also appear in the
relaxation rates of open quantum systems. To demonstrate this we consider one
of the simplest models that has two topologically distinct phases in its ground
state: the Kitaev chain model for the $p$-wave superconductor. After
introducing dissipation to this model we estimate the Liouvillian gap in both
strong and weak dissipative limits. Our results show that a non-zero
superconducting pairing opens a Liouvillian gap that remains open in the limit
of infinite system size. At strong dissipation this gap is essentially
unaffected by the topology of the underlying Hamiltonian ground state. In
contrast, when dissipation is weak, the topological phase of the Hamiltonian
ground state plays a crucial role in determining the character of the
Liouvillian gap. We find, for example, that in the topological phase this gap
is completely immune to changes in the chemical potential. On the other hand,
in the non-topological phase the Liouvillian gap is suppressed by a large
chemical potential. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2401.13732 |