Discrete time-crystalline order enabled by quantum many-body scars: entanglement steering via periodic driving
ORAL
Abstract
The control of many-body quantum dynamics in complex systems is a key challenge in the quest to reliably produce and manipulate large-scale quantum entangled states. Recently, quench experiments in Rydberg atom arrays (Bluvstein et al. Science, 25 Feb 2021) demonstrated that coherent revivals associated with quantum many-body scars can be stabilized by periodic driving, generating stable subharmonic responses over a wide parameter regime. We analyze a simple, related model where these phenomena originate from spatiotemporal ordering in an effective Floquet unitary, corresponding to discrete time-crystalline (DTC) behavior in a prethermal regime. Unlike conventional DTC, the subharmonic response exists only for Neel-like initial states, associated with quantum scars. We predict robustness to perturbations and identify emergent timescales that could be observed in future experiments. Our results suggest a route to controlling entanglement in interacting quantum systems by combining periodic driving with many-body scars.
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Publication: Maskara et al., Discrete time-crystalline order enabled by quantum many-body scars: entanglement steering via periodic driving, arxiv:2102.13160 Feb 2021.
Presenters
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Nishad Maskara
Harvard University
Authors
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Nishad Maskara
Harvard University
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Alexios Michailidis
IST Austria, Institute of Science and Technology Austria
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Wen Wei Ho
Stanford University
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Dolev Bluvstein
Harvard University
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Soonwon Choi
University of California, Berkeley
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Mikhail Lukin
Harvard University
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Maksym Serbyn
Institute of Science and Technology Austria