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IQUIST seminar: "Emergent hydrodynamics in a strongly interacting dipolar spin ensemble in diamond", presented by Chong Zu, Washington University in St. Louis

Event Type
Seminar/Symposium
Sponsor
IQUIST
Location
190 Engineering Sciences Building, 1101 W Springfield Ave, Urbana, IL 61801
Date
Mar 8, 2022   11:00 - 11:50 am  
Speaker
Chong Zu, Assistant Professor, Department of Physics, Washington University in St. Louis
Contact
Hannah Stites
E-Mail
hstites2@illinois.edu
Phone
217-300-4072
Views
115
Originating Calendar
IQUIST Seminar Series

Emergent hydrodynamics in a strongly interacting dipolar spin ensemble in diamond.

Abstract: Conventional wisdom holds that macroscopic classical phenomena naturally emerge from microscopic quantum laws. However, building direct connections between these two descriptions has remained an enduring scientific challenge. In particular, it is difficult to quantitatively predict the emergent ‘classical’ properties of a system (for example, diffusivity, viscosity and compressibility) from a generic microscopic quantum Hamiltonian. Here we introduce a hybrid solid-state spin platform in diamond, where the underlying disordered, dipolar quantum Hamiltonian gives rise to the emergence of unconventional spin diffusion at nanometre length scales [1]. In particular, the combination of positional disorder and on-site random fields leads to diffusive dynamics that are Fickian yet non-Gaussian. Finally, by tuning the underlying parameters within the spin Hamiltonian via a combination of static and driven fields, we demonstrate direct control over the emergent spin diffusion coefficient. If time permits, I will end by describing our recent efforts to realize a quantum simulation platform based upon spin defects in 2D [2].

[1] C. Zu, et al., Nature 597, 45-50 (2021)
[2] E. Davis, et al., arXiv:2103.12742 (2021)

Bio: Chong Zu joined Washington University as an assistant professor in the summer of 2021. He received his B.S. in physics and mathematics from Tsinghua University in 2011. After completing his Ph.D. in Prof. Luming Duan’s group at Tsinghua University in 2016, he began postdoctoral work at UC Berkeley in Prof. Norman Yao's group. His research focuses on employing solid-state spin defects (e.g. nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond) for quantum sensing, simulation and computation.

To watch online go to the IQUIST youtube channel:   https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCzAySwQXF8J4kRolUzg2ww

For Zoom link you may check the IQUIST calendar weekly email or contact Kelly Foster (foster5@illinois.edu), or Hannah Stites (hstites2@illinois.edu). To subscribe to our weekly email for event announcements, please go to https://lists.illinois.edu/lists/subscribe/iquist-announcements.

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