Sudden expansion of Mott insulators in one dimension
L. Vidmar, S. Langer, I.P. McCulloch, U. Schneider, U. Schollwoeck, F., Heidrich-Meisner

TL;DR
This study reveals that in one-dimensional lattices, both bosonic and fermionic Mott insulators expand with the same velocity regardless of interaction strength, and the dynamics are sensitive to quantum phase transitions and dimensionality effects.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the expansion velocity of Mott insulators in one dimension is interaction-independent and identical for bosons and fermions, revealing new insights into non-equilibrium quantum dynamics.
Findings
Bosonic and fermionic Mott insulators expand with the same velocity in 1D.
Expansion velocity is independent of interaction strength in the Mott phase.
Breaking integrability alters expansion dynamics, especially in ladder geometries.
Abstract
We investigate the expansion of bosons and fermions in a homogeneous lattice after a sudden removal of the trapping potential using exact numerical methods. As a main result, we show that in one dimension, both bosonic and fermionic Mott insulators expand with the same velocity, irrespective of the interaction strength, provided the expansion starts from the ground state of the trapped gas. Furthermore, their density profiles become identical during the expansion: The asymptotic density dynamics is identical to that of initially localized, non-interacting particles, and the asymptotic velocity distribution is flat. The expansion velocity for initial correlated Mott insulating states is therefore independent of the interaction strength and particle statistics. Interestingly, this non-equilibrium dynamics is sensitive to the interaction driven quantum phase transition in the Bose-Hubbard…
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