4.6 Article

Quantum trajectories of dissipative time crystals

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW A
Volume 108, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevA.108.L041303

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In this study, we explore the boundary time-crystal transition at the quantum trajectory level through continuous monitoring. The experiments show that the photon count signal and the homodyne current can be used to identify and characterize critical behavior at the time-crystal phase transition. The oscillation patterns in the time-crystal phase can be observed in finite systems and individual realizations, while the emission signals exhibit intermittent strong fluctuations at the transition point.
We explore the boundary time-crystal transition at the level of quantum trajectories which result from continuous monitoring. This Letter is motivated by recent experiments [G. Ferioli, A. Glicenstein, I. Ferrier-Barbut, and A. Browaeys, Nat. Phys. 19, 1345 (2023)] realizing this many-body system and which allow one in principle to gain in situ information on its nonequilibrium dynamics. We find that the photon count signal as well as the homodyne current allow one to identify and characterize critical behavior at the time-crystal phase transition. In the time-crystal phase these quantities display persistent oscillations, resolvable in finite systems and in individual realizations. At the transition point the dynamics of the emission signals feature intermittent strong fluctuations, which can be understood through a simple nonlinear phase model. We furthermore show that the time-integrated homodyne current can serve as a useful dynamical order parameter. From this perspective the time crystal can be viewed as a state of matter in which different oscillation patterns coexist.

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