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Quantum in motion
ICTP hosts a workshop on the dynamics of strongly correlated quantum systems
A relatively new and growing field of physics--the dynamics of
non-equilibrium quantum systems--drew a diverse group of participants to
Trieste on 21 June. For five days, scientists from 33 countries and six
continents attended the "Dynamics of Strongly Correlated Quantum
Systems" workshop.
Strongly correlated quantum systems are systems of interacting particles
that have unusual collective behaviors. The field has potential
applications in quantum optics, cold atomic gases, and quantum
computing. Other applications include nanofabrication and transport on
the nanoscale.
"The games we used to play in theory are now possible in experiment,"
says Alessandro Silva, an organiser of the conference and a visiting
scientist with ICTP's Condensed Matter and Statistical Physics (CMSP)
section. Advances in theoretical understanding, in-depth simulations,
and experimental breakthroughs have boosted the field considerably.
Silva describes the developments in the field during the past 10 years
as the "dream of a theoretician."
"We had a lot of young people...this means that the field has a future,"
Silva says. He adds that he was astonished that 105 people attended for
the relatively short workshop, and at the level of discussions that took
place during free hours. This year's workshop complements the more
general three-week course in non-equilibrium physics that the CMSP group
organized last summer.
One of the presenters, Marcos Rigol of Georgetown University, United
States, spoke on "Quantum chaos and thermalization in finite
one-dimensional systems". He explained his work on using quantum
quenches to study the dynamics and thermalization of bosons: "You have
some hot coffee and you pour in some cold milk just to cool it down.
What happens if you pour the quantum soup of coffee into the quantum
soup of milk?" Rigol's research also indicates that the definition of
chaos is much the same in classical and quantum theories. "Things cannot
be true in one of them and not true in the other. We have to match them."
For presenter Vladimir Gritsev of the University of Fribourg,
Switzerland, the conference was his fifth trip to ICTP in the past two
years. He feels that we could be witnessing a paradigm shift and that
the field is "currently at the point of creating a general language" for
the diverse group of participants that includes theoreticians and
experimentalists.
Silva hopes that the conference was well timed to give the people
starting out in the field added momentum. The organizers are already
finalizing next year's instalment in the series of workshops.
More details about the workshop can be found here.