Volume 325

iTHEMS Weekly News Letter

Press Release

Masazumi Honda thumbnail

Creation of the Quantum Universe and Precise Calculation of the Wave Function of the Universe

2024-10-17

In modern cosmology, the idea that the universe was created from nothing through quantum effects has been a topic of active research. However, a long-standing debate has persisted regarding which of two prominent hypotheses—the no-boundary proposal or the tunneling proposal—is correct.

A research team, including Hiroki Matsui (Postdoctoral fellow, Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics), Kazumasa Okabayashi (Postdoctoral fellow, Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics), Masazumi Honda (Senior Research Scientist, RIKEN), and Takahiro Terada (Research Assistant Professor, Nagoya University), has made significant progress in this debate by calculating the wave function of the universe from first principles, without the need for arbitrary assumptions about either proposal. Previous analyses left mathematical ambiguities unresolved, but this team eliminated those ambiguities using a method called resurgence theory. Their calculations rigorously demonstrated, under certain assumptions, that the wave function of the universe aligns with predictions from the tunneling proposal, not the no-boundary proposal.

This result is a giant step forward in resolving the longstanding debate between these two hypotheses.

For more details, please refer to the Kyoto University press release via the related links.

Reference

  1. Masazumi Honda, Hiroki Matsui, Kazumasa Okabayashi, and Takahiro Terada, Resurgence in Lorentzian quantum cosmology: No-boundary saddles and resummation of quantum gravity corrections around tunneling saddle points, Phys. Rev. D 110, 083508 (2024), doi: 10.1103/PhysRevD.110.083508

Hot Topic

RIKEN Quantum Workshop on “Quantum-Like Modeling in Cognitive & Social Sciences" on October 11, 2024

2024-10-16

On Oct. 11 (Fri), RIKEN Quantum Workshop on “Quantum-Like Modeling in Cognitive & Social Sciences” was held at Room 359, Main Research Building, RIKEN (Wako). The workshop was hosted by RIKEN Quantum and had 30 participants from a variety of fields, including cognitive and social sciences as well as life sciences, mathematics, and physics. This was the first workshop at RIKEN to discuss “Quantum-Like Modeling” for various phenomena in cognitive and social sciences.

“Quantum-Like Modeling” suggests that using quantum probability calculus and its applications could be useful to rationalize cognitive and social phenomena as open quantum systems and expand previous understandings, obtained through simple linear algebra, by applying quantum formalizations.

After Atsushi Iriki, one of the organizers, explained the purpose of the workshop, there were four invited talks. Andrei Khrennikov gave a comprehensive talk on applications of the methodology and formalism of quantum theory outside of physics, in cognition, psychology, decision making, social and political sciences, economics and finance, genetics and evolutionary biology. Masanao Ozawa gave an introduction to his proposed quantum instrument theory, which unifies quantum measurement and quantum cognition through quantum simulation. Haruki Emori talked about applications of quantum computers to cognitive sciences based on the quantum instrument theory. Finally, Miho Fuyama introduced her empirical research on subjective experiences and superposition states of quantum probability theory in narrative reading.

These invited talks were followed by a general discussion and networking mixer, which deepened understanding of “Quantum-Like Modeling” in cognitive and social sciences from various perspectives and promoted new networking among the participants.

Upcoming Events

Seminar

iTHEMS Biology Seminar

The hidden language of light: Polarization signals in cuttlefish courtship

October 24 (Thu) at 16:00 - 17:00, 2024

Arata Nakayama (Postdoctoral Fellow, Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute, The University of Tokyo)

The most conspicuous signals are generally the most attractive; this principle underlies the evolution of sexual signal. While the sexual signal design and its exceptional diversity have primarily explored on the color (wavelength) of light, various animals utilize a different property of light for signaling: polarization.
In short, polarization is a third physical property of light, alongside color and intensity, and refers to the orientation of light waves' vibrations. While most vertebrate species, including humans, cannot perceive polarized light, some invertebrate species, such as crustaceans and cephalopods (e.g., octopus, squid, and cuttlefish), can detect the polarization of light and reflect polarized light from their body surfaces, suggesting that the polarization of light might function as a communication signal. In our study, by focusing on the sexually ornamented trait and the courtship behavior of specific cephalopod species, we found an polarization courtship signal, which is extremely conspicuous from the perspective of cephalopod polarization vision. Additionally, we conducted morphological observations and optical analyses of their polarization-reflective body surfaces, uncovering a novel mechanism for generating complex polarization patterns. In this gethering, I will provide a general introduction to the role of polarization as a visual cue and signal, followed by an overview of our study on the unique courtship behavior involving polarization signaling in the cuttlefish Sepia andreana.

Venue: Hybrid Format (3F #359 and Zoom), Seminar Room #359, 3F Main Research Building, RIKEN

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

ABBL-iTHEMS Joint Astro Seminar

Asymmetries in Stripped Envelope Supernovae

October 25 (Fri) at 14:00 - 15:15, 2024

Thomas Maunder (Ph.D. Student, Department of Astronomy, Monash University, Australia)

The explosion mechanism of supernovae is not yet fully understood. In order to better understand the inner-workings of the explosion we need to be able to test our models with observations. Current hydrodynamic simulations of stellar explosions often do not provide photometry or spectroscopy as this requires a treatment of the radiation transport of the ejecta. This project takes hydrodynamic simulations of Type Ib/c (stripped-envelope) supernovae and then performs Monte Carlo Radiative Transport simulations on the ejecta to obtain results we can compare with observations. We choose stripped-envelope supernovae because the lack of Hydrogen shell provides a more direct view into the core and the asymmetries of the explosion mechanism. Through these comparisons between models and observations we can improve our understanding of the explosion mechanism in core-collapse supernovae.

Venue: via Zoom

Event Official Language: English

Workshop

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Knitting Day

November 1 (Fri) at 10:00 - 16:00, 2024

Tomohiko Sano (Senior Assistant Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Science and Technology, Keio University)
Samuel Poincloux (Assistant Professor, Department of Physics and Mathematics, College of Science and Engineering, Aoyama Gakuin University)
Taiki Goto (Master's Student, Keio University)
Daisuke Shimamoto (Master's Student, The University of Tokyo)
Kotone Tajiri (Master's Student, Keio University)
Sonia Mahmoudi (Assistant Professor, Mathematical Science Group, Advanced Institute for Materials Research (AIMR), Tohoku University)

The 'Knitting Day' event is a one-day gathering that brings together students and researchers from diverse fields to explore the fascinating connections between the topology and mechanics of knitting. It aims to foster interdisciplinary discussions on how knitting techniques can be understood through mathematical, physical, and engineering lenses and their potential applications in industry.

This event is organized with the Interdisciplinary Math Study Group.

Schedule:

10:00 – 10:30: Welcome coffee

10:30 – 11:00: Samuel Poincloux

11:10 – 11:30: Kotone Tajiri

11:30 – 12:00: Discussion

12:00 – 13:00: Lunch

13:00 – 13:30: Daisuke Shimamoto

13:40 – 14:00: Taiki Goto

14:00 – 14:30: Discussion

14:30 – 15:10: Sonia Mahmoudi

15:10 – 16:00: Discussion & Coffee Break

16:00-18:00: Internal Discussion

From 18:00: Dinner

Titles:

Taiki Goto: Twist deformation in trefoil knot
Sonia Mahmoudi: A new topological model of knitting
Samuel Poincloux: Knit mechanics and frictional troubles
Daisuke Shimamoto: TBA
Kotone Tajiri: Curling morphology of knitted fabrics: structure and mechanics

Venue: #345-347, 3F, Main Research Building, RIKEN

Event Official Language: English

Workshop

iTHEMS Science Outreach Workshop 2024

November 15 (Fri) - 17 (Sun), 2024

This year's meeting on "Outreach of RIKEN iTHEMS 2024@Sendai&Zoom" will be held from FRI November 15 to SUN November 17, as a face-to-face meeting at TOKYO ELECTRON House of Creativity of Tohoku Forum for Creativity in cooperation with iTHEMS SUURI-COOL (Sendai) using ZOOM for the necessary part as well.

Venue: TOKYO ELECTRON House of Creativity, Katahira Campus, Tohoku University / via Zoom

Event Official Language: Japanese

Seminar

DEEP-IN Seminar

Solving inverse problem via latent variable optimization of diffusion models: An application to CT reconstruction

November 25 (Mon) at 14:00 - 15:00, 2024

Sho Ozaki (Assistant Professor, Graduate School of Science and Technology, Hirosaki University)

Inverse problems are widely studied in various scientific fields, including mathematics, physics, and medical imaging (such as CT and MRI reconstructions). In this talk, I will present a novel method for solving inverse problems using the diffusion model, with an application to CT reconstruction. The diffusion model, which is a core component of recent image-generative AI, such as Stable Diffusion and DALL-E3, is capable of producing high-quality images with rich diversity. The imaging process in CT (i.e., CT reconstruction) is mathematically an inverse problem. When the radiation dose is reduced to minimize a patient's exposure, image quality deteriorates due to information loss, making the CT reconstruction problem highly ill-posed. In the proposed method, the diffusion model, trained with a large dataset of high-quality images, serves as a regularization technique to address the ill-posedness. Consequently, the proposed method reconstructs high-quality images from sparse (low-dose) CT data while preserving the patient's anatomical structures. We also compare the performance of the proposed method with those of other existing methods, and find that the proposed method outperforms the existing methods in terms of quantitative indices.

Reference

  1. Sho Ozaki, Shizuo Kaji, Toshikazu Imae, Kanabu Nawa, Hideomi Yamashita, Keiichi Nakagawa, Iterative CT Reconstruction via Latent Variable Optimization of Shallow Diffusion Models, arXiv: 2408.03156

Venue: #359, 3F, Seminar Room #359, 3F Main Research Building, RIKEN / via Zoom

Event Official Language: English

Colloquium

The 27th MACS Colloquium thumbnail
Maskawa Building for Education and Research venue photo

MACS ColloquiumSupported by iTHEMS

The 27th MACS Colloquium

November 25 (Mon) at 14:45 - 18:00, 2024

Ryusuke Hamazaki (RIKEN Hakubi Team Leader, Nonequilibrium Quantum Statistical Mechanics RIKEN Hakubi Research Team, RIKEN Cluster for Pioneering Research (CPR))
Teruaki Enoto (Associate Professor, Department of Physics, Division of Physics and Astronomy, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University)

14:45-15:00 Teatime discussion
15:00-16:00 Talk by Dr. Ryusuke Hamazaki (RIKEN Hakubi Team Leader, Nonequilibrium Quantum Statistical Mechanics RIKEN Hakubi Research Team)
16:15-17:15 Talk by Dr. Teruaki Enoto (Associate Professor, Department of Physics, Division of Physics and Astronomy, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University)
17:15-18:00 Discussion

Venue: Maskawa Hall, 1F, Maskawa Building for Education and Research, North Campus, Kyoto University

Event Official Language: Japanese

Seminar

Detecting single gravitons with quantum controlled mechanical oscillators

December 16 (Mon) at 14:00 - 15:30, 2024

Germain Tobar (PhD Fellow, Stockholm University, Norway)

The quantisation of gravity is widely believed to result in gravitons - particles of discrete energy that form gravitational waves. But their detection has so far been considered impossible. Here we show that signatures of single gravitons can be observed in laboratory experiments. We show that stimulated and spontaneous single graviton processes can become relevant for massive quantum acoustic resonators and that stimulated absorption can be resolved through optomechanical read-out of single phonons of a multi-mode bar resonator. We analyse the feasibility of observing a signal from the inspiral, merger and post-merger phase of a compact binary inspiral. Our results show that single graviton signatures are within reach of experiments. In analogy to the discovery of the photoelectric effect for photons, such signatures can provide the first experimental evidence of the quantisation of gravity.

[1] G. Tobar, S. K. Manikandan, T. Beitel, and I. Pikovski, Nature Communications 15, 7229.
[2] G. Tobar, Igor Pikovski ,Michael E. Tobar, arXiv:2406.16898 (2024).

Venue: #359, 3F, Seminar Room #359, 3F Main Research Building, RIKEN

Event Official Language: English

Workshop

Integrated Innovation Building (IIB) venue photo

Third Workshop on Density Functional Theory: Fundamentals, Developments, and Applications (DFT2025)

March 25 (Tue) - 27 (Thu), 2025

The density functional theory (DFT) is one of the powerful methods to solve quantum many-body problems, which, in principle, gives the exact energy and density of the ground state. The accuracy of DFT is, in practice, determined by the accuracy of an energy density functional (EDF) since the exact EDF is still unknown. Currently, DFT has been used in many communities, including nuclear physics, quantum chemistry, and condensed matter physics, while the fundamental study of DFT, such as the first principle derivations of an accurate EDF and methods to calculate many observables from obtained densities and excited states, is still ongoing. However, there has been little opportunity to have interdisciplinary communication.

On December 2022, we had the first workshop on this series (DFT2022) at Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics, Kyoto University, and several interdisciplinary discussions and collaborations were started. On February 2024, we had the second workshop on this series (DFT2024) at RIKEN Kobe Campus, and more stimulated discussion occured. To keep and extend collaborations, we organize the third workshop. Since the third workshop, we extend the scope of the workshop to the development and application of DFT as well. In this workshop, the current status and issues of each discipline will be shared towards solving these problems by meeting together among researchers in mathematics, nuclear physics, quantum chemistry, and condensed matter physics.

This workshop mainly comprises lectures/seminars on cutting-edge topics and discussion, while sessions composed of contributed talks are also planned.

Venue: 8F, Integrated Innovation Building (IIB), Kobe Campus, RIKEN / via Zoom

Event Official Language: English

Person of the Week

Yuuka Kanakubo thumbnail

Self-introduction: Yuuka Kanakubo

2024-10-11

Hi, I’m Yuuka. I did my PhD at Sophia University in Japan, and moved to Finland and spent 2 years there as a postdoc at the University of Jyväskylä. Now, I have returned to Japan as a RIKEN-Berkeley fellow at iTHEMS.

Since my PhD, I have been working on the development of Monte-Carlo event generators for relativistic nuclear collisions. I am generally interested in a collision of large and heavy nuclei, such as lead ions or gold ions, with a large mass number. The typical collision energy reaches up to a few TeV per nucleon pair at their centre of mass. With these experimental setups, we can generate an extremely hot soup of quarks and gluons, known as “quark-gluon plasma”.

Relativistic nuclear collisions are dynamical processes with several different stages. I describe the collision process in full 3D and as dynamically as possible by sequentially applying different theoretical descriptions to each stage. For instance, I describe the production of quarks and gluons in the initial impact of colliding nuclei using perturbative QCD, the evolution of quark-gluon plasma with relativistic relativistic hydrodynamics combined with lattice QCD, and the interaction of hadrons in the final state using hadronic transport.

I believe iTHEMS is an excellent research environment in this aspect as the study requires diverse knowledge in, for example, nuclear structure, perturbative and non-perturbative QCD, thermodynamics, methodology in Monte-Carlo simulations of many-body systems etc. I am excited to discuss with people from various fields and hope to find new solutions or new ideas!

Paper of the Week

Week 3, October 2024

2024-10-17

Title: Ab initio study on heavy-fermion behavior in LiV$_2$O$_4$: Role of Hund's coupling and stability
Author: Steffen Backes, Yusuke Nomura, Ryotaro Arita, Hiroshi Shinaoka
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2410.08515v1

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