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Nonequilibrium phase transition in a driven-dissipative quantum antiferromagnet

ORAL

Abstract



A deeper theoretical understanding of driven-dissipative interacting systems and their nonequilibrium phase transitions is essential both to advance our fundamental physics understanding and to harness technological opportunities arising from optically controlled quantum many-body states. Here we provide a numerical study of dynamical phases and the transitions between them in the nonequilibrium steady state of the prototypical two-dimensional Heisenberg antiferromagnet with drive and dissipation. We demonstrate a nonthermal transition that is characterized by a qualitative change in the magnon distribution, from subthermal at low drive to a generalized Bose-Einstein form including a nonvanishing condensate fraction at high drive. A finite-size analysis reveals static and dynamical critical scaling at the transition, with a discontinuous slope of the magnon number versus driving field strength and critical slowing down at the transition point. Implications for experiments on quantum materials and polariton condensates are discussed.

Publication: https://arxiv.org/abs/2107.03841

Presenters

  • Mona H Kalthoff

    Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter

Authors

  • Mona H Kalthoff

    Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter

  • Dante M Kennes

    RWTH Aachen University, RWTH Aachen University, Max Planck Institute for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter Hamburg, RWTH Aachen / MPSD

  • Andrew J Millis

    Columbia University, Columbia University; Flatiron Institute, Columbia University, Flatiron Institute

  • Michael A Sentef

    Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter, MPSD, Max Planck Institute for the Structure &