Frustration and quantum entanglement are two exotic quantum properties in quantum many-body systems. However, despite several efforts, an exact relationship between them remains elusive. In this work, we explore the relationship between frustration and quantum entanglement in a physical model describing strongly correlated ultracold bosonic atoms in optical lattices. In particular, we consider the one-dimensional Bose-Hubbard model comprising both nearest-neighbor ( t 1 ) and frustrated next-nearest neighbor ( t 2 ) hoppings and examine how the interplay of on-site interaction ( U ) and hoppings results in different quantum correlations dominating the ground state of the system. We then analyze the behavior of quantum entanglement in the model. In particular, we compute genuine multipartite entanglement as quantified through the generalized geometric measure and make a comparative study with bipartite entanglement and other relevant order parameters. We observe that genuine multipartite entanglement has a very rich behavior throughout the considered parameter regime and frustration does not necessarily favor generating a high amount of it. Moreover, we show that in the region with strong quantum fluctuations, the particles remain highly delocalized in all momentum modes and share a very low amount of both bipartite and multipartite entanglement. Our work illustrates the necessity to give separate attention to dominating ordering behavior and quantum entanglement in the ground state of strongly correlated systems.
Genuine multipartite entanglement in a one-dimensional Bose-Hubbard model with frustrated hopping / Singha Roy, Sudipto; Carl, Leon Elias; Hauke, Philipp Hans Juergen. - In: PHYSICAL REVIEW. B. - ISSN 2469-9969. - ELETTRONICO. - 106:19(2022), pp. 195158-195158. [10.1103/PhysRevB.106.195158]
Genuine multipartite entanglement in a one-dimensional Bose-Hubbard model with frustrated hopping
Singha Roy Sudipto
Primo
;Carl LeonSecondo
;Hauke Philipp
2022-01-01
Abstract
Frustration and quantum entanglement are two exotic quantum properties in quantum many-body systems. However, despite several efforts, an exact relationship between them remains elusive. In this work, we explore the relationship between frustration and quantum entanglement in a physical model describing strongly correlated ultracold bosonic atoms in optical lattices. In particular, we consider the one-dimensional Bose-Hubbard model comprising both nearest-neighbor ( t 1 ) and frustrated next-nearest neighbor ( t 2 ) hoppings and examine how the interplay of on-site interaction ( U ) and hoppings results in different quantum correlations dominating the ground state of the system. We then analyze the behavior of quantum entanglement in the model. In particular, we compute genuine multipartite entanglement as quantified through the generalized geometric measure and make a comparative study with bipartite entanglement and other relevant order parameters. We observe that genuine multipartite entanglement has a very rich behavior throughout the considered parameter regime and frustration does not necessarily favor generating a high amount of it. Moreover, we show that in the region with strong quantum fluctuations, the particles remain highly delocalized in all momentum modes and share a very low amount of both bipartite and multipartite entanglement. Our work illustrates the necessity to give separate attention to dominating ordering behavior and quantum entanglement in the ground state of strongly correlated systems.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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