Search Results for author: Haining Pan

Found 4 papers, 0 papers with code

Quantum Many-Body Physics Calculations with Large Language Models

no code implementations5 Mar 2024 Haining Pan, Nayantara Mudur, Will Taranto, Maria Tikhanovskaya, Subhashini Venugopalan, Yasaman Bahri, Michael P. Brenner, Eun-Ah Kim

We evaluate GPT-4's performance in executing the calculation for 15 research papers from the past decade, demonstrating that, with correction of intermediate steps, it can correctly derive the final Hartree-Fock Hamiltonian in 13 cases and makes minor errors in 2 cases.

Disorder-induced zero-bias peaks in Majorana nanowires

no code implementations9 Mar 2021 Sankar Das Sarma, Haining Pan

Focusing specifically on the recently retracted Nature 2018 Zhang et al. work [Zhang et al., Nature (2021)] and the related recently available correctly analyzed data from this Delft experiment [Zhang et al., arXiv:2101. 11456 (2021)], we discuss the general problem of confirmation bias in experiments verifying various theoretical topological quantization predictions.

Quantization Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics

Interaction-Driven Filling-Induced Metal-Insulator Transitions in 2D Moiré Lattices

no code implementations8 Dec 2020 Haining Pan, Sankar Das Sarma

Using a realistic band structure for twisted WSe$_2 $ materials, we develop a theory for the interaction-driven correlated insulators to conducting metals transitions through the tuning of the filling factor around commensurate fractional fillings of the moir\'e unit cell in the 2D honeycomb lattice, focusing on the dominant half-filled Mott insulating state, which exists for both long- and short-range interactions.

Strongly Correlated Electrons

Three-terminal nonlocal conductance in Majorana nanowires: distinguishing topological and trivial in realistic systems with disorder and inhomogeneous potential

no code implementations24 Sep 2020 Haining Pan, Jay D. Sau, S. Das Sarma

Therefore, we focus on the question of whether the combination of the local, nonlocal electrical and the thermal conductance can separate the good, bad, and ugly zero-bias conductance peaks in finite-length wires.

Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics

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