Krissia Zawadzki

Assistant Professor

Time- and momentum-resolved tunneling spectroscopy of pump-driven nonthermal excitations in Mott insulators


Journal article


K. Zawadzki, A. Feiguin
Physical review B, 2019

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APA   Click to copy
Zawadzki, K., & Feiguin, A. (2019). Time- and momentum-resolved tunneling spectroscopy of pump-driven nonthermal excitations in Mott insulators. Physical Review B.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Zawadzki, K., and A. Feiguin. “Time- and Momentum-Resolved Tunneling Spectroscopy of Pump-Driven Nonthermal Excitations in Mott Insulators.” Physical review B (2019).


MLA   Click to copy
Zawadzki, K., and A. Feiguin. “Time- and Momentum-Resolved Tunneling Spectroscopy of Pump-Driven Nonthermal Excitations in Mott Insulators.” Physical Review B, 2019.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{k2019a,
  title = {Time- and momentum-resolved tunneling spectroscopy of pump-driven nonthermal excitations in Mott insulators},
  year = {2019},
  journal = {Physical review B},
  author = {Zawadzki, K. and Feiguin, A.}
}

Abstract

We present a computational technique to calculate time and momentum resolved non-equilibrium spectral density of correlated systems using a tunneling approach akin scanning tunneling spectroscopy. The important difference is that our probe is extended, basically a copy of the sample, allowing one to extract the momentum information of the excitations. We illustrate the method by measuring the spectrum of a Mott-insulating extended Hubbard chain after a sudden quench with the aid of time-dependent density matrix renormalization group (tDMRG) calculations. We demonstrate that the system realizes a non-thermal state that is an admixture of spin and charge density wave states, with corresponding signatures that are recognizable as in-gap sub-bands. In particular, we identify a band of excitons and one of stable anti-bound states at high energies that gains enhanced visibility after the pump. We do not appreciate noticeable relaxation within the time-scales considered, which is attributed to the lack of decay channels due to spin-charge separation. These ideas can be readily applied to study transient dynamics and spectral signatures of correlation-driven non-equilibrium processes.


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