Soutenance de Filippo Caleca
When |
Sep 30, 2025
from 02:00 to 04:00 |
---|---|
Where | Salle des thèses |
Attendees |
Filippo Caleca |
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Quantum simulation platforms such as cold atoms, superconducting circuits, and trapped ions enable the experimental investigation of quantum many-body systems, with important implications for quantum technologies. In this thesis, we investigate how entanglement and correlations develop in such systems; and how they can be harnessed both for the theoretical study of models relevant to condensed matter physics, and for potential applications in quantum metrology. We begin by focusing on the adiabatic preparation of quantum many-body ground states. In particular, we show that quantum simulators can probe the link between spectral degeneracy and spontaneous symmetry breaking, as pioneered by P.W. Anderson. We prove that odd-sized spin-1/2 systems exhibiting time-reversal symmetry sustain a net magnetization even away from the thermodynamic limit, thanks to an exact spectral degeneracy. Moreover, the symmetry-broken state exhibits scalable spin squeezing, a key resource for quantum metrology. We then turn to a different paradigm of evolution: quench dynamics. In particular, we show that monitoring the real-time evolution of correlations allows for the experimental measurement of the dispersion relation of fundamental excitations. In the case of two-dimensional long-range ordered systems, such as the dipolar XY model, these excitations are spin waves, leading to sharp features in the evolution of two-point correlation functions. Conversely, in one-dimensional systems, fundamental excitations have a fermionic nature, and their detection requires the measurement of non-local correlation functions. The latter, while inaccessible in condensed matter, are instead well suited to quantum simulators with individually addressable degrees of freedom.