TY - JOUR
T1 - Anderson orthogonality in the dynamics after a local quantum quench
AU - Münder, Wolfgang
AU - Weichselbaum, Andreas
AU - Goldstein, Moshe
AU - Gefen, Yuval
AU - Von Delft, Jan
N1 - DFG [SFB 631, De-730/3-2, De-730/4-2, SFB-TR12, WE4819/1-1]; NSF [PHY05-51164]; Israel-Russia MOST; Israel Science Foundation; EU under STREP; Excellence Cluster "Nanosystems Initiative Munich (NIM)"; Adams Foundation of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities; Simons Foundation; Fulbright Foundation; BIKURA (FIRST) of Israel Science FoundationWe thank R. Berkovits, L. Borda, Y. Imry, Y. Oreg, B. Sbierski, A. Schiller, G. Zarand, and A. Zawadowski for helpful discussions. This work received support from the DFG (SFB 631, De-730/3-2, De-730/4-2, SFB-TR12, WE4819/1-1), in part from the NSF under Grant No. PHY05-51164, from the Israel-Russia MOST grant, the Israel Science Foundation, and the EU grant under the STREP program GEOMDISS. Financial support by the Excellence Cluster "Nanosystems Initiative Munich (NIM)" is gratefully acknowledged. M.G. is supported by the Adams Foundation of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, the Simons Foundation, the Fulbright Foundation, and the BIKURA (FIRST) program of the Israel Science Foundation.
PY - 2012/6/4
Y1 - 2012/6/4
N2 - We present a systematic study of the role of Anderson orthogonality for the dynamics after a quantum quench in quantum impurity models, using the numerical renormalization group. As shown by Anderson in 1967, the scattering phase shifts of the single-particle wave functions constituting the Fermi sea have to adjust in response to the sudden change in the local parameters of the Hamiltonian, causing the initial and final ground states to be orthogonal. This so-called Anderson orthogonality catastrophe also influences dynamical properties, such as spectral functions. Their low-frequency behavior shows nontrivial power laws, with exponents that can be understood using a generalization of simple arguments introduced by Hopfield and others for the x-ray edge singularity problem. The goal of this work is to formulate these generalized rules as well as to numerically illustrate them for quantum quenches in impurity models involving local interactions. As a simple yet instructive example, we use the interacting resonant level model as testing ground for our generalized Hopfield rule. We then analyze a model exhibiting population switching between two dot levels as a function of gate voltage, probed by a local Coulomb interaction with an additional lead serving as charge sensor. We confirm a recent prediction that charge sensing can induce a quantum phase transition for this system, causing the population switch to become abrupt. We elucidate the role of Anderson orthogonality for this effect by explicitly calculating the relevant orthogonality exponents.
AB - We present a systematic study of the role of Anderson orthogonality for the dynamics after a quantum quench in quantum impurity models, using the numerical renormalization group. As shown by Anderson in 1967, the scattering phase shifts of the single-particle wave functions constituting the Fermi sea have to adjust in response to the sudden change in the local parameters of the Hamiltonian, causing the initial and final ground states to be orthogonal. This so-called Anderson orthogonality catastrophe also influences dynamical properties, such as spectral functions. Their low-frequency behavior shows nontrivial power laws, with exponents that can be understood using a generalization of simple arguments introduced by Hopfield and others for the x-ray edge singularity problem. The goal of this work is to formulate these generalized rules as well as to numerically illustrate them for quantum quenches in impurity models involving local interactions. As a simple yet instructive example, we use the interacting resonant level model as testing ground for our generalized Hopfield rule. We then analyze a model exhibiting population switching between two dot levels as a function of gate voltage, probed by a local Coulomb interaction with an additional lead serving as charge sensor. We confirm a recent prediction that charge sensing can induce a quantum phase transition for this system, causing the population switch to become abrupt. We elucidate the role of Anderson orthogonality for this effect by explicitly calculating the relevant orthogonality exponents.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84862203807&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.85.235104
DO - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.85.235104
M3 - مقالة
SN - 1098-0121
VL - 85
JO - Physical Review B - Condensed Matter and Materials Physics
JF - Physical Review B - Condensed Matter and Materials Physics
IS - 23
M1 - 235104
ER -