Robert Weis

Kirchhoff Institute for Physics

The Kirchhoff Institute for Physics (KIP) is named after a prominent physicist of the 19th Century: Gustav Robert Kirchhoff, who worked in Heidelberg for 21 years. His well-known lectures on experimental and theoretical physics attracted many students. Kirchhoff's ground-breaking research was extraordinarily diverse, spanning electrical, magnetic, optical, elastic, hydrodynamic and thermal processes. His laws for electrical circuits are well-known. At the time he was in Heidelberg, in conjunction with Robert Wilhelm Bunsen, he discovered spectral analysis and its application to solar radiation. In this way, Kirchhoff laid the foundation for modern astrophysics, as well as formulating the laws of thermal radiation, which played a key role in the discovery of quantum physics. The KIP aims to continue in this tradition of diverse scientific research and education.

Physikalisches Kolloquium

10. May 2024 5:00 pm  Machines that Learn via Physical Dynamics

Prof. Dr. Florian Marquardt, Institut für Theoretische Physik, Universität Erlangen, Recent rapid progress in applications of machine learning has also illustrated that there is an exponential growth of required resources, especially for advanced applications like large-language models. This makes it all the more urgent to explore possible alternatives to current digital artificial neural networks. The field of neuromorphic computing sets itself the goal to identify suitable physical architectures that enable us to perform machine learning tasks in a highly parallel and much more energy-efficient manner. more...

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CQD Colloquium (funded by Structures) given by Dr. Cesar Cabrera, 08.05.24, INF 308 HS 1

Next CQD Colloquium (funded by Structures) will be given by Dr. Cesar Cabrera. Please note the special place and time:

Wednesday, 08.05. at 2 p.m., Fakultät für Physik und Astronomie, INF 308, HS 1

The main talk will be given by Dr. Cesar Cabrera, University of Hamburg about:

Tracking the confinement-induced hybridization of the Higgs mode in a strongly interacting superfluid
Superconductivity in quantum-confined systems has attracted significant attention due to the im- plications for both fundamental science and technological development. Confinement modifies the dimensionality of the system, density of states, and critical temperature of superconductors, as the coherence length and the superconducting gap approaches the natural scales of length and energy imposed by the system size. A deep understanding of how confinement influences the superconducting pairing properties and its order parameter dynamics out of equilibrium is a theoretical challenge [1,2,3].
In my talk, I will show how strong confinement in a neutral fermionic superfluid affects the order parameter dynamics along the BEC-BCS crossover. By performing trap modulation spec- troscopy in a highly oblate Fermi gas, we reveal a well-defined excitation of the order parameter throughout the entire crossover. On the BCS regime, the resonance position follows twice the pairing gap ∆, signaling a stable Higgs mode. Approaching the strongly correlated regime the mode energy drops below the pairing gap and finally approaches twice the trap frequency on the BEC regime. We interpret our results as hybridization and transition of the Higgs mode into the lowest excitation connected with the trap corresponding to a spatial coherent excitation of the order parameter. This excitation vanishes when approaching the critical temperature of the superfluid, where the order parameter is expected to disappear. The experimental evidence together with an effective field theory deepens our understanding of the stability of the Higgs mode in the absence of particle-hole symmetry and its interplay with confinement.

[1] C. M. Varma, J. Low Temp. Phys. 126, 901 (2002).
[2] D. Podolsky, et al., Phys. Rev. B Condens. Matter 84, 174522 (2011)
[3] D. Pekker and C. M. Varma, Annu. Rev. Condens. Matter Phys. 6, 269 (2015).

The pretalk will be given by Paul Hill, PI, University of Heidelberg, about "Realization of a Laughlin State of two rapidly rotating Fermions”.

For information about the CQD Colloquium, please see: https://cqd.uni-heidelberg.de/events/cqdcolloquium

 

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