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Topological phenomena in quantum walks; elementary introduction to the physics of topological phases

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abstract

Discrete quantum walks are dynamical protocols for controlling a single quantum particle. Despite of its simplicity, quantum walks display rich topological phenomena and provide one of the simplest systems to study and understand topological phases. In this article, we review the physics of discrete quantum walks in one and two dimensions in light of topological phenomena and provide elementary explanations of topological phases and their physical consequence, namely the existence of boundary states. We demonstrate that quantum walks are versatile systems that simulate many topological phases whose classifications are known for static Hamiltonians. Furthermore, topological phenomena appearing in quantum walks go beyond what has been known in static systems; there are phenomena unique to quantum walks, being an example of periodically driven systems, that do not exist in static systems. Thus the quantum walks not only provide a powerful tool as a quantum simulator for static topological phases but also give unique opportunity to study topological phenomena in driven systems.

fields

quant-ph 1

years

2021 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 1

representative citing papers

Response to glassy disorder in coin on spread of quantum walker

quant-ph · 2021-11-18 · unverdicted · novelty 4.0

Glassy disorder in the coin of a 1D discrete-time quantum walk inhibits ballistic spread while keeping it faster than classical diffusion, with slow or fast falloff and mid-strength inflection points depending on the disorder distribution.

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  • Response to glassy disorder in coin on spread of quantum walker quant-ph · 2021-11-18 · unverdicted · none · ref 11 · internal anchor

    Glassy disorder in the coin of a 1D discrete-time quantum walk inhibits ballistic spread while keeping it faster than classical diffusion, with slow or fast falloff and mid-strength inflection points depending on the disorder distribution.