NUQG

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== Publications ==
== Publications ==
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* I. Vidanovic, A. Balaz, H. Al-Jibbouri and A. Pelster: "[http://www.scl.rs/papers/1106.4686v1.pdf Nonlinear Bose-Einstein-condensate Dynamics Induced by a Harmonic Modulation of the S-wave Scattering Length]", Phys. Rev. A 84 (2011), Accepted for publication
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* I. Vidanovic, H. Al-Jibbouri, A. Balaz and A. Pelster: “Parametric and Geometric Resonances of Collective Oscillation Modes in Bose-Einstein Condensates”, to be presented at the Photonica 2011 conference, 29 August – 2 September 2011, Belgrade, Serbia
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* A. I. Nicolin, I. Vidanovic and A. Balaz: “Faraday Waves and Collective Modes in Bose-Einstein Condensates”, to be presented at ICT Innovations 2011 conference, 14-16 September 2011, Skopje, Macedonia
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* I. Vidanovic, A. Balaz, H. Al-Jibbouri and A. Pelster: "[http://www.scl.rs/papers/1106.4686v1.pdf Nonlinear Bose-Einstein-condensate Dynamics Induced by a Harmonic Modulation of the S-wave Scattering Length]", Phys. Rev. A 84 (2011) 013618, DOI: [http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.84.013618 10.1103/PhysRevA.84.013618]
* A. Balaz, I. Vidanovic, A. Bogojevic, A. Belic and A. Pelster: "[http://www.scl.rs/papers/JSTAT-2011-03-P03005.pdf Fast Converging Path Integrals for Time-Dependent Potentials: II. Generalization to Many-Body Systems and Real-Time Formalism]", J. Stat. Mech. (2011) P03005, DOI: [http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1742-5468/2011/03/P03005 10.1088/1742-5468/2011/03/P03005]
* A. Balaz, I. Vidanovic, A. Bogojevic, A. Belic and A. Pelster: "[http://www.scl.rs/papers/JSTAT-2011-03-P03005.pdf Fast Converging Path Integrals for Time-Dependent Potentials: II. Generalization to Many-Body Systems and Real-Time Formalism]", J. Stat. Mech. (2011) P03005, DOI: [http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1742-5468/2011/03/P03005 10.1088/1742-5468/2011/03/P03005]
* A. Balaz, I. Vidanovic, A. Bogojevic, A. Belic and A. Pelster: "[http://www.scl.rs/papers/JSTAT-2011-03-P03004.pdf Fast Converging Path Integrals for Time-Dependent Potentials: I. Recursive Calculation of Short-Time Expansion of the Propagator]", J. Stat. Mech. (2011) P03004, DOI: [http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1742-5468/2011/03/P03004 10.1088/1742-5468/2011/03/P03004]
* A. Balaz, I. Vidanovic, A. Bogojevic, A. Belic and A. Pelster: "[http://www.scl.rs/papers/JSTAT-2011-03-P03004.pdf Fast Converging Path Integrals for Time-Dependent Potentials: I. Recursive Calculation of Short-Time Expansion of the Propagator]", J. Stat. Mech. (2011) P03004, DOI: [http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1742-5468/2011/03/P03004 10.1088/1742-5468/2011/03/P03004]
* I. Vidanovic, A. Balaz, H. Al-Jibbouri and A. Pelster: "Nonlinear BEC Dynamics Induced by Harmonic Modulation of Atomic S-wave Scattering Lenght", Proceedings of the National Symposium on the Condensed Matter (SFKM-2011), p. 55, 18-22 April 2010, Belgrade, Serbia
* I. Vidanovic, A. Balaz, H. Al-Jibbouri and A. Pelster: "Nonlinear BEC Dynamics Induced by Harmonic Modulation of Atomic S-wave Scattering Lenght", Proceedings of the National Symposium on the Condensed Matter (SFKM-2011), p. 55, 18-22 April 2010, Belgrade, Serbia
* I. Vidanovic, A. Balaz, H. Al-Jibbouri and A. Pelster: "[http://www.scl.rs/pics/files/News/20110313-SCL-at-DPG/dresden2011.pdf Nonlinear BEC Dynamics Induced by Harmonic Modulation of Atomic S-wave Scattering Lenght]", Proceedings of the Quantum Optics and Photonics Division of 2011 DPG Spring Meeting (DPG11), Q57.3, 13-18 March 2011, Dresden, Germany
* I. Vidanovic, A. Balaz, H. Al-Jibbouri and A. Pelster: "[http://www.scl.rs/pics/files/News/20110313-SCL-at-DPG/dresden2011.pdf Nonlinear BEC Dynamics Induced by Harmonic Modulation of Atomic S-wave Scattering Lenght]", Proceedings of the Quantum Optics and Photonics Division of 2011 DPG Spring Meeting (DPG11), Q57.3, 13-18 March 2011, Dresden, Germany

Revision as of 06:28, 16 August 2011

Contents

General Information

  • Application's name: Numerical study of ultra-cold quantum gases (NUQG)
  • Virtual Research Community: Computational Physics
  • Scientific contact: Antun Balaz (antun at ipb.ac.rs)
  • Technical contact: Antun Balaz (antun at ipb.ac.rs)
  • Developers: Scientific Computing Laboratory, Institute of Physics Belgrade, Serbia
  • Web site: http://www.scl.rs/

Short Description

The behavior of atoms at low temperatures is a research field that attracted a lot of attention after experimental realization of Bose-Einstein condensation in 1995. and several Nobel prizes for this discovery and associated effort related to cooling techniques able to produce quantum gases at temperatures as low as 50 nK. Macroscopic quantum phenomena (Bose-Einstein condensation, superfluidity, superconductivity) are now extensively studied experimentally, and numerical simulations have become an essential tool to understanding such strongly correlated systems. In the past several years optical lattices have also attracted much research interest due to tunable nature of the parameter space, allowing in-situ studies of the behavior that was previously inaccessible in the condensed matter physics. The recently introduced effective action approach by the path integral group of the Scientific Computing Laboratory of the Institute of Physics Belgrade provides an ideal framework for numerical study of Bose-Einstein condensation and response of the condensate to rotation, vortex formation and evolution in the rotating condensate, the study of the parametric resonance in the collective modes of the condensate due to the modulation of the interaction using the Feshbach resonance, and effects of disorder to global and local properties and dynamics of Bose-Einstein condensates.

NUQG application requires HPC resources due to several reasons: exact diagonalization of large systems, requiring excessive amounts of memory; tightly-coupled large-scale computations of real-time dynamics, requiring significant amounts of computing power to process large initial conformations of systems of ultra-cold quantum gases; large-scale study of the effects of disorder, which require real-time dynamics calculation for the statistically significant ensemble of disordered potentials etc.

Problems Solved

Calculation of the ground state for ultra-cold quantum gases systems, calculation of global and local properties of Bose-Einstein condensates, real-time dynamics and formation of vortices, effects of disorder on Bose-Einstein condensation, study of Bose-glass quantum phase transition and its characterization.

Scientific and Social Impact

This HPC application will be a significant numerical tool for ongoing research on the physics of ultra-cold quantum gases, being carried out at the Scientific Computing Laboratory of the Institute of Physics Belgrade and its international collaborators. The results which will be obtained will provide insights and deepen our understanding of dynamical processes in highly correlated systems of quantum gases, properties of their phases, and new quantum phase transitions due to the effects of disorder. These questions have raised a significant research interest in recent years, and are currently being investigated in leading quantum optics laboratories throughout the world. A number of questions still remain unresolved (e.g. precise characterization of the Bose-glass phase transition), and the NUQG application will contribute to their solving.

The understanding of the behavior of quantum gases is a fundamental research problem, and has various important societal impacts. It leads to the development of quantum optics and nano-science, which is essential for many aspects of the technology development, including the design of new devices, materials and meta-materials, nano-fabrication, etc. In addition to these practical societal impacts, the obtained results can be effectively used to popularize the science, especially among the young students, due to the fundamental nature of the research problems studied (especially the notion of quantum phase transition), visual appeal of the dynamical evolution and effects of disorder on Bose-Einstein condensates, and its vast possible technological applications, specifically in information and communication technologies.

Collaborations and Beneficiaries

This application is developed as a part of a long-term research at the Scientific Computing Laboratory of the Institute of Physics Belgrade. As of 2007, the development of this application also serves the collaboration between SCL and University of Duisburg-Essen, Potsdam University and Free University of Berlin. During 2011, we have also established collaboration with the experimental group from University of Sao Paulo (campus Sao Carlos).

Within the framework of the project, we have initiated collaboration with the Romanian partner IFIN-HH, who have extensive experience in numerical studies of Bose-Einstein condensates. We also envisage collaboration with the Bulgarian partner IICT-BAS on the application of quasi-MC methods for generation of disordered potentials, as well as development of its GPGPU counterpart.

Technical Features and HP-SEE Implementation

  • Primary programming language: C/C++
  • Parallel programming paradigm: OpenMP/MPI
  • Main parallel code: NUQG is a suite of codes and contains SPEEDUP module for exact diagonalization, module for study of real-time dynamics, new module for disorder potential generation, and module for solving GP equations
  • Pre/post processing code: Included in the main code
  • Application tools and libraries: SPRNG, Intel MKL, FFTW
  • Number of cores required: 512
  • Minimum RAM/core required: 1-2 GB
  • Storage space during a single run: up to 10 GB
  • Long-term data storage: up to 4 TB

Usage Example

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Publications

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