Volume 279

iTHEMS Weekly News Letter

Seminar Report

ABBL-iTHEMS Joint Astro Seminar by Derek Beattie Inman on November 24, 2023

2023-11-26

Cosmological observations have led to an extremely precise understanding of the large-scale structure of the Universe. A common assumption is to extrapolate large-scale properties to smaller scales; however, whether this is correct or not is unknown and many well-motivated early Universe scenarios predict substantially different structure formation histories. In this seminar Derek discussed two scenarios where nonlinear structures form much earlier than is typically assumed. In the first case, the initial fluctuations are enhanced on small scales leading to either primordial black holes clusters or WIMP minihalos right after matter-radiation equality. In the second, Derek showed that an additional attractive dark force leads to structure formation even in the radiation dominated Universe. Derek furthermore discussed possible observations of such early structure formation including changes to the cosmic microwave background, dark matter annihilation, and when the first galaxies form.

Reported by Shigehiro Nagataki

Early Formation of Dark Matter Halos image

Upcoming Events

Seminar

iTHEMS Theoretical Physics Seminar

Breaking down the magnonic Wiedemann-Franz law in the hydrodynamic regime

December 4 (Mon) at 15:00 - 16:30, 2023

Ryotaro Sano (Ph.D. Student, Division of Physics and Astronomy, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University)

Quantum transport has attracted a profound growth of interest owing to its fundamental importance and many applications in condensed matter physics. Recent significant developments in experimental techniques have further boosted the study of quantum transport. Notably in ultraclean systems, strong interactions between quasi-particles drastically affect the transport properties, resulting in an emergent hydrodynamic behavior.
Recent experiments on ultrapure ferromagnetic insulators have opened up new pathways for magnon hydrodynamics. Hydrodynamic magnon transport implies exhibiting extraordinary features and has a potential for innovative functionalities beyond the conventional non-interacting magnon picture. However, the direct observation of magnon fluids remains an open issue due to the lack of probes to access the time and length scales characteristics of this regime.
In this work, we derive a set of coupled hydrodynamic equations for a magnon fluid and study the spin and thermal conductivities by focusing on the most dominant time scales [1]. As a hallmark of the hydrodynamic regime, we reveal that the ratio between the two conductivities shows a large deviation from the so-called magnonic WF law. We also identify an origin of the drastic breakdown of the magnonic WF law as the difference in relaxation processes between spin and heat currents, which is unique to the hydrodynamic regime. Therefore, our results will become key evidence for an emergent hydrodynamic magnon behavior and lead to the direct observation of magnon fluids.

Reference

  1. Ryotaro Sano and Mamoru Matsuo, Breaking Down the Magnonic Wiedemann-Franz Law in the Hydrodynamic Regime, Phys. Rev. Lett. 130, 166210 (2023), doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.130.166201, arXiv: 2208.14458

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

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

iTHEMS Theoretical Physics Seminar

Gravity of Accretion Discs and Black Holes

December 5 (Tue) at 14:00 - 15:00, 2023

Petr Kotlařík (Ph.D. Student, Institute of Theoretical Physics, Charles University, Czechia)

The typical black hole solutions describe only isolated black holes. However, in astrophysics, such a condition is never strictly satisfied. As matter accretes onto the black hole, disc structures are often formed. In this talk, I will summarize our recent attempts to find the gravitational field of such a nonisolated black hole. We start from the simplest case of static and axially symmetric metric. Although it is a somewhat "rough" approximation in the astrophysical context, this idealization may already help us to understand some interesting implications of the disc's gravity. Moreover, with such a simplification, we can obtain exact analytical "superpositions" of the Schwarzchild black hole and a disc. When some rotation is present, dragging effects complicate the situation dramatically. Then, one typically has to resort to numerical relativity or some approximate methods, e.g., perturbations. In the talk, I also address the stationary case and demonstrate what we can do on the level of the direct metric perturbation.

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

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

iTHEMS Theoretical Physics Seminar

Rotating discs on the Kerr black hole background

December 5 (Tue) at 15:00 - 16:30, 2023

David Kofroň (Postdoctoral Researcher, Institute of Theoretical Physics, Charles University, Czechia)

Analytical solution of a rotating black hole surrounded by accretion disc in full GR is, so far, unknown. The Ernst equation is nonlinear. In this talk, we will provide a framework in which the solutions of linearised Ernst equations can be obtained from the linear perturbations of Kerr black hole treated in the formalism of the Debye potentials. In this way, we recover all the metric perturbations in term of a single complex scalar function (which solves the Laplace equation).

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

Event Official Language: English

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iTHEMS Biology Seminar

Translating between evolutionary game theory and theoretical ecology

December 5 (Tue) at 16:30 - 17:30, 2023

Arne Traulsen (Director, Department for Theoretical Biology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, Germany)

Both theoretical ecology and evolutionary game theory describe the dynamics of interacting populations. More than 40 years ago, Hofbauer and Sigmund established a mathematical equivalence between the Lotka-Volterra equations and the replicator dynamics from evolutionary game theory. However, this equivalence has not been exploited by empiricists so far. One of the issues is dimensionality: An ecological interaction of two species corresponds to an evolutionary game between three types. Only when we focus on a special case with identical growth rates, it is possible to translate without this trick, leading to a more direct equivalence between the frameworks. Consequently, one has to be particularly careful how to classify interactions and how to assess dynamical outcomes. For example, a ‘Prisoner's Dilemma’ interaction where the `cooperators' have a higher intrinsic growth rate than `defectors' can result in stable coexistence of the two types and may ultimately not represent a social dilemma at all.

Venue: via Zoom

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

iTHEMS Seminar

Cosection localization via shifted symplectic geometry

December 6 (Wed) at 10:00 - 11:30, 2023

Young-Hoon Kiem (Professor, School of Mathematics, Korea Institute for Advanced Study (KIAS), Republic of Korea)

Modern enumerative invariants are defined as integrals of cohomology classes against virtual fundamental classes constructed by Li-Tian and Behrend-Fantechi. When the obstruction sheaf admits a cosection, the virtual fundamental class is localized to the zero locus of the cosection. When the cosection is furthermore enhanced to a (-1)-shifted closed 1-form, the zero locus admits a (-2)-shifted symplectic structure and thus we have another virtual fundamental class by the Oh-Thomas construction. An obvious question is whether these two virtual fundamental classes coincide or not. In this talk, we will see that (-1)-shifted closed 1-forms arise naturally as an analogue of the Lagrange multiplier method. Furthermore, a proof of the equality of the two virtual fundamental classes and its applications will be discussed. Based on a joint work with Hyeonjun Park.

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

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

iTHEMS Theoretical Physics Seminar

Gravitational Lensing in Black Hole Spacetimes of the Plebanski-Demianski Class

December 6 (Wed) at 16:00 - 17:30, 2023

Torben Christian Frost (Postdoctoral Researcher, Kavli Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics, Peking University, China)

Einstein's field equations allow various different black hole solutions. Among these solutions, the most famous are most likely the Schwarzschild and the Kerr spacetimes, which are both special cases of the so-called Plebanski-Demianski spacetime. Besides the Schwarzschild and Kerr spacetimes, the Plebanski-Demianski spacetime also includes other solutions as special cases, among them the C-metric and the NUT metric. They describe a linearly accelerating black hole and a black hole with gravitomagnetic charge, respectively. The question is now how we can determine if an astrophysical black hole can be described by one of these spacetimes.
We will address this question using gravitational lensing for the three spacetimes with the most salient lensing features, namely the C-metric, the NUT metric, and the Kerr metric. For this purpose, we will first outline how to solve the equations of motion analytically using elementary and Jacobi's elliptic functions as well as Legendre's elliptic integrals. Then we will fix an observer in the domain of outer communication and relate the constants of motion of the lightlike geodesics to latitude-longitude coordinates on the observer's celestial sphere. We will use the analytic solutions to write down the lens equations, calculate the redshift, and the travel time. Finally, we will discuss and compare the results and comment on how we can use them to place constraints on the spin parameter, the acceleration parameter, and the gravitomagnetic charge of a black hole.

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

Event Official Language: English

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ABBL-iTHEMS Joint Astro Seminar

Exploring material strengths of dust aggregates in planet formation by numerical simulations

December 8 (Fri) at 14:00 - 15:15, 2023

Misako Tatsuuma (Research Scientist, iTHEMS)

The planet formation process is the growth from sub-micrometer-sized cosmic dust grains to thousand-kilometer-sized planets. This growth process has broadly two phases: the growth from dust grains to kilometer-sized planetesimals, mainly driven by intermolecular forces like van der Waals forces and hydrogen bonds, and the subsequent growth from planetesimals to planets, governed by gravitational forces. However, the planetesimal formation process encounters various challenges, including fragmentation and bouncing resulting from collisions among dust aggregates. To gain insights into the planetesimal formation process and how to avoid these obstacles, I have been focused on measuring and formulating the material strengths of dust aggregates using grain simulations. In this talk, I will introduce my works on the material strengths of dust aggregates and their applications to kilometer-sized bodies in the solar system, such as comets and asteroids.

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

Event Official Language: English

Lecture

Academic-Industrial Innovation LectureCo-hosted by RIKEN SUURI CORPORATION

Transforming Industries and Society: The Power of Advanced Math and AI Technologies

December 12 (Tue) at 16:30 - 18:00, 2023

Hirokazu Anai (Principal Research Director, FUJITSU RESEARCH, FUJITSU Ltd.)

In this talk, we will review the history and the latest trends in artificial intelligence (AI) and mathematical technologies in recent years. We will also introduce various real-world problem-solving efforts that utilize state-of-the-art mathematics and artificial intelligence technology. Additionally, we will explore the role of mathematical and AI technologies and the social value they bring, while providing examples of their applications in a wide range of fields, such as manufacturing, disaster prevention, medical care, and institutional design in society. Furthermore, we will consider the thinking and skills required to address industrial and social issues using mathematical and AI technologies. The technologies that will be discussed in this talk include the following keywords: mathematical modeling, simulation, optimization, deep learning, topological data analysis, causal discovery, game theory, matching theory, and social mathematics.

Venue: Okochi Hall, 1F Laser Science Laboratory, RIKEN / via Zoom

Event Official Language: English

Lecture

RIKEN Quantum Lecture

Rapid development of cold-atom quantum computers and their prospect

December 26 (Tue) at 13:30 - 17:00, 2023

Takafumi Tomita (Assistant Professor, Photo-Molecular Science, Institute for Molecular Science)

Note for participants:
For on-site participants, please register via the registration form.
For online participants finding the Zoom link, you can get it after filling the registration form.

Program:
13:30-15:00 Lecture 1
15:00-15:30 Coffee break
15:30-17:00 Lecture 2

Abstract:
In this talk, I will give an overview of the recent rapid progress of cold-atom quantum computers. In a cold-atom quantum computer, a laser-cooled atomic gas in a vacuum chamber is captured with a two-dimensional trap array called an optical tweezers array, which is an array of tightly focused laser beams. An array of cold single atoms thus created is initialized, gate operated, and readout with other laser beams. Because of its controllability and scalability, the cold-atom quantum computer has been attracting much attention, as one of the most promising candidates in the race to develop quantum-computer hardware. I will describe the characteristics and development trends of the cold-atom hardware, as well as the development of a cold-atom quantum computer at Institute for Molecular Science including the realization of an ultrafast quantum gate using ultrashort laser pulses.

Venue: #435-437, 4F, Main Research Building, RIKEN / via Zoom

Event Official Language: English

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ABBL-iTHEMS Joint Astro Seminar

Probing structure of neutron stars through X-ray bursters

January 12 (Fri) at 14:00 - 15:15, 2024

Akira Dohi (Special Postdoctoral Researcher, Astrophysical Big Bang Laboratory, RIKEN Cluster for Pioneering Research (CPR))

Type-I X-ray bursts are rapidly brightening phenomena triggered by the nuclear burning of light elements near the surface of accreting neutron stars. Most of the X-ray bursters show irregular behavior of light curves. However, some X-ray bursters are somehow quite regular, i.e., constant recurrence time and constant shaper of light curves, and are often called Clocked bursters, which are powerful sites to probe uncertainties of many model parameters such as accretion rate, the composition of accreted matter, reaction rates, neutron star structure, and temperature. In this study, we focus on the uncertainties of the equation of states, which determines the latter two properties. Based on our numerical models covering whole areas of neutron stars, we will present their impact on X-ray burst light curves. Furthermore, we will discuss the possibility of constraining the equation of states from Clocked bursters such as GS 1826-24 and 1RXS J180408.9-342058.

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

Event Official Language: English

Workshop

Integrated Innovation Building (IIB) venue photo

Second Workshop on Fundamentals in Density Functional Theory (DFT2024)

February 20 (Tue) - 22 (Thu), 2024

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. 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 interdisiplinary discussions and collaborationd were started. To share such progresses and extend collaborations, we organize the second workshop. 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 a half-day session composed of contributed talks is also planned.

This workshop is partially supported by iTHEMS-phys Study Group. This workshop is a part of the RIKEN Symposium Series.

The detailed information can be found in the workshop website.

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

Event Official Language: English

Upcoming Visitors

December 3 (Sun) - 9 (Sat), 2023

Young-Hoon Kiem

Professor, School of Mathematics, Korea Institute for Advanced Study (KIAS), Republic of Korea

Visiting Place: RIKEN Wako Campus

December 4 (Mon) - 8 (Fri), 2023

David Kofroň

Postdoctoral Researcher, Institute of Theoretical Physics, Charles University, Czechia

Visiting Place: RIKEN Wako Campus

December 4 (Mon) - 8 (Fri), 2023

Torben Christian Frost

Postdoctoral Researcher, Kavli Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics, Peking University, China

Visiting Place: RIKEN Wako Campus

Paper of the Week

Week 5, November 2023

2023-11-30

Title: Study on Lambda(1405) in the flavor SU(3) limit in the HAL QCD method
Author: Kotaro Murakami, Sinya Aoki
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2311.17421v1

Title: Searching for High Frequency Gravitational Waves with Phonons
Author: Yonatan Kahn, Jan Schütte-Engel, Tanner Trickle
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2311.17147v1

Title: End-to-end complexity for simulating the Schwinger model on quantum computers
Author: Kazuki Sakamoto, Hayata Morisaki, Junichi Haruna, Etsuko Itou, Keisuke Fujii, Kosuke Mitarai
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2311.17388v1

Title: Towards complete characterization of topological insulators and superconductors: A systematic construction of topological invariants based on Atiyah-Hirzebruch spectral sequence
Author: Seishiro Ono, Ken Shiozaki
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2311.15814v1

Title: Speed of sound exceeding the conformal bound in dense 2-color QCD
Author: Etsuko Itou, Kei Iida
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2311.15259v1

Title: New configuration set of HAL QCD collaboration
Author: Etsuko Itou for HAL QCD collaboration
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2311.15522v1

Title: Supernovae Ia and Gamma-Ray Bursts together shed new lights on the Hubble constant tension and cosmology
Author: M. G. Dainotti, B. De Simone, G. Montani, E. Rinaldi, M. Bogdan, K. M. Islam, A. Gangopadhyay
Journal Reference: PoS(ICRC2023)1367
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2309.05876v1

Title: Parameter estimation by learning quantum correlations in continuous photon-counting data using neural networks
Author: Enrico Rinaldi, Manuel González Lastre, Sergio García Herreros, Shahnawaz Ahmed, Maryam Khanahmadi, Franco Nori, Carlos Sánchez Muñoz
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2310.02309v1

Title: GRB Optical and X-ray Plateau Properties Classifier Using Unsupervised Machine Learning
Author: Shubham Bhardwaj, Maria G. Dainotti, Sachin Venkatesh, Aditya Narendra, Anish Kalsi, Enrico Rinaldi, Agnieszka Pollo
Journal Reference: MNRAS, Volume 525, Issue 4, pp.5204-5223, November 2023
doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stad2593
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2308.14288v4

Title: Estimating truncation effects of quantum bosonic systems using sampling algorithms
Author: Masanori Hanada, Junyu Liu, Enrico Rinaldi, Masaki Tezuka
Journal Reference: Mach. Learn.: Sci. Technol. 4 045021, 2023
doi: https://doi.org/10.1088/2632-2153/ad035c
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2212.08546v2

Title: Approximate Autonomous Quantum Error Correction with Reinforcement Learning
Author: Yexiong Zeng, Zheng-Yang Zhou, Enrico Rinaldi, Clemens Gneiting, Franco Nori
Journal Reference: Phys. Rev. Lett. 131, 050601 (2023)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.131.050601
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2212.11651v2

Title: MEET: A Monte Carlo Exploration-Exploitation Trade-off for Buffer Sampling
Author: Julius Ott, Lorenzo Servadei, Jose Arjona-Medina, Enrico Rinaldi, Gianfranco Mauro, Daniela Sánchez Lopera, Michael Stephan, Thomas Stadelmayer, Avik Santra, Robert Wille
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2210.13545v2

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