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Illustration of strictly local dynamical symmetries

A system with a strictly local dynamical symmetry can be coupled to any external system (e.g. a cat) and will still persistently oscillate (see https://arxiv.org/abs/2008.11166)

Credit: Vendi Jukic Buca, Pulci

Dr Berislav Buca

Visitor

Research theme

  • Fields, strings, and quantum dynamics
  • Quantum information and computation
  • Quantum materials
  • Quantum optics & ultra-cold matter

Sub department

  • Atomic and Laser Physics

Research groups

  • Quantum systems engineering
berislav.buca@physics.ox.ac.uk
Atmospheric Physics Clarendon Laboratory
  • About
  • Publications

Symmetries and conservation laws in quantum trajectories: Dissipative freezing

Physical Review A American Physical Society 100:4 (2019) 042113

Authors:

C Sánchez Muñoz, B Buča, J Tindall, A González-Tudela, D Jaksch, D Porras

Abstract:

In driven-dissipative systems, the presence of a strong symmetry guarantees the existence of several steady states belonging to different symmetry sectors. Here we show that, when a system with a strong symmetry is initialized in a quantum superposition involving several of these sectors, each individual stochastic trajectory will randomly select a single one of them and remain there for the rest of the evolution. Since a strong symmetry implies a conservation law for the corresponding symmetry operator on the ensemble level, this selection of a single sector from an initial superposition entails a breakdown of this conservation law at the level of individual realizations. Given that such a superposition is impossible in a classical, stochastic trajectory, this is a a purely quantum effect with no classical analogue. Our results show that a system with a closed Liouvillian gap may exhibit, when monitored over a single run of an experiment, a behaviour completely opposite to the usual notion of dynamical phase coexistence and intermittency, which are typically considered hallmarks of a dissipative phase transition. We discuss our results with a simple, realistic model of squeezed superradiance.
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Exact large deviation statistics and trajectory phase transition of a deterministic boundary driven cellular automaton

Physical Review E American Physical Society (APS) 100:2 (2019) 020103

Authors:

Berislav Buča, Juan P Garrahan, Tomaž Prosen, Matthieu Vanicat
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Heating-Induced Long-Range η Pairing in the Hubbard Model

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society 123:3 (2019) 030603

Authors:

Joseph Tindall, Berislav Buča, Jonathan Coulthard, D Jaksch

Abstract:

We show how, upon heating the spin degrees of freedom of the Hubbard model to infinite temperature, the symmetries of the system allow the creation of steady states with long-range correlations between η pairs. We induce this heating with either dissipation or periodic driving and evolve the system towards a nonequilibrium steady state, a process which melts all spin order in the system. The steady state is identical in both cases and displays distance-invariant off-diagonal η correlations. These correlations were first recognized in the superconducting eigenstates described in Yang’s seminal Letter [Phys. Rev. Lett. 63, 2144 (1989)], which are a subset of our steady states. We show that our results are a consequence of symmetry properties and entirely independent of the microscopic details of the model and the heating mechanism.
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Complex coherent quantum many-body dynamics through dissipation

Nature Communications Springer Nature 10 (2019) 1730

Authors:

Berislav Buca, Joseph Tindall, D Jaksch

Abstract:

The assumption that physical systems relax to a stationary state in the long-time limit underpins statistical physics and much of our intuitive understanding of scientific phenomena. For isolated systems this follows from the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis. When an environment is present the expectation is that all of phase space is explored, eventually leading to stationarity. Notable exceptions are decoherence-free subspaces that have important implications for quantum technologies. These have been studied for systems with a few degrees of freedom only. Here we identify simple and generic conditions for dissipation to prevent a quantum many-body system from ever reaching a stationary state. We go beyond dissipative quantum state engineering approaches towards controllable long-time non-stationary dynamics typically associated with macroscopic complex systems. This coherent and oscillatory evolution constitutes a dissipative version of a quantum time-crystal. We discuss the possibility of engineering such complex dynamics with fermionic ultracold atoms in optical lattices.
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Non-stationary dynamics and dissipative freezing in squeezed superradiance

(2019)

Authors:

Carlos Sánchez Muñoz, Berislav Buča, Joseph Tindall, Alejandro González-Tudela, Dieter Jaksch, Diego Porras
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