Multichannel Kondo Anyons for topological Quantum Computation
APA
Komijani, Y. (2020). Multichannel Kondo Anyons for topological Quantum Computation. Perimeter Institute. https://pirsa.org/20010098
MLA
Komijani, Yashar. Multichannel Kondo Anyons for topological Quantum Computation. Perimeter Institute, Jan. 30, 2020, https://pirsa.org/20010098
BibTex
@misc{ pirsa_PIRSA:20010098, doi = {10.48660/20010098}, url = {https://pirsa.org/20010098}, author = {Komijani, Yashar}, keywords = {Condensed Matter}, language = {en}, title = {Multichannel Kondo Anyons for topological Quantum Computation}, publisher = {Perimeter Institute}, year = {2020}, month = {jan}, note = {PIRSA:20010098 see, \url{https://pirsa.org}} }
I propose [1] to use the residual anyons of overscreened Kondo physics for quantum computation. A superconducting proximity gap of Δ<TK can be utilized to isolate the anyon from the continuum of excitations and stabilize the non-trivial fixed point. We use the dynamical large-N technique [2] and bosonization to show that the residual entropy survives in a superconductor and suggest a charge Kondo setup for isolating and detecting the Majorana fermion in the two-channel Kondo impurity.
I will then conjecture that topological defects in a multichannel Kondo lattice carry anyons. Motivated by this, we look at a two-channel SU(N) Kondo lattice in the large-N limit [3]. In this model, the continuous channel-symmetry is spontaneously broken, forming a “channel ferromagnet” and realizing the so-called fractionalized order parameter [4]. By integrating out the fermions we derive an effective action that describes the symmetry breaking and its emergent collective modes. Remarkably, topological defects in the order parameter carry a U(1) flux, manifested in the Aharonov-Bohm phase picked by electrons that orbit the defect. We argue that the phase diagram contains a non-magnetic transition between a large and a small Fermi surface.
I will also briefly highlight our recent results [5] on a magnetically frustrated Kondo-screened triangle which contains two symmetry-preserving phases, transcending the Landau-Ginzburg paradigm. The quantum phase transition is driven by the proliferation of instantons of the emergent gauge theory and can be regarded as a toy model for the deconfined criticality.