Anomalous phase ordering of a quenched ferromagnetic superfluid

Coarsening dynamics, the canonical theory of phase ordering following a quench across a symmetry breaking phase transition, is thought to be driven by the annihilation of topological defects. Here we show that this understanding is incomplete. We simulate the dynamics of an isolated spin-1 conden...

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Main Author: Lewis A. Williamson, P. Blair Blakie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SciPost 2019-09-01
Series:SciPost Physics
Online Access:https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.7.3.029
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spelling doaj-14a2b212780b4c94a4db9ea04edecad72020-11-25T01:25:39ZengSciPostSciPost Physics2542-46532019-09-017302910.21468/SciPostPhys.7.3.029Anomalous phase ordering of a quenched ferromagnetic superfluidLewis A. Williamson, P. Blair BlakieCoarsening dynamics, the canonical theory of phase ordering following a quench across a symmetry breaking phase transition, is thought to be driven by the annihilation of topological defects. Here we show that this understanding is incomplete. We simulate the dynamics of an isolated spin-1 condensate quenched into the easy-plane ferromagnetic phase and find that the mutual annihilation of spin vortices does not take the system to the equilibrium state. A nonequilibrium background of long wavelength spin waves remain at the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless temperature, an order of magnitude hotter than the equilibrium temperature. The coarsening continues through a second much slower scale invariant process with a length scale that grows with time as $t^{1/3}$. This second regime of coarsening is associated with spin wave energy transport from low to high wavevectors, bringing about the the eventual equilibrium state. Because the relevant spin waves are noninteracting, the transport occurs through a dynamic coupling to other degrees of freedom of the system. The transport displays features of a spin wave energy cascade, providing a potential profitable connection with the emerging field of spin wave turbulence. Strongly coupling the system to a reservoir destroys the second regime of coarsening, allowing the system to thermalise following the annihilation of vortices.https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.7.3.029
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lewis A. Williamson, P. Blair Blakie
spellingShingle Lewis A. Williamson, P. Blair Blakie
Anomalous phase ordering of a quenched ferromagnetic superfluid
SciPost Physics
author_facet Lewis A. Williamson, P. Blair Blakie
author_sort Lewis A. Williamson, P. Blair Blakie
title Anomalous phase ordering of a quenched ferromagnetic superfluid
title_short Anomalous phase ordering of a quenched ferromagnetic superfluid
title_full Anomalous phase ordering of a quenched ferromagnetic superfluid
title_fullStr Anomalous phase ordering of a quenched ferromagnetic superfluid
title_full_unstemmed Anomalous phase ordering of a quenched ferromagnetic superfluid
title_sort anomalous phase ordering of a quenched ferromagnetic superfluid
publisher SciPost
series SciPost Physics
issn 2542-4653
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Coarsening dynamics, the canonical theory of phase ordering following a quench across a symmetry breaking phase transition, is thought to be driven by the annihilation of topological defects. Here we show that this understanding is incomplete. We simulate the dynamics of an isolated spin-1 condensate quenched into the easy-plane ferromagnetic phase and find that the mutual annihilation of spin vortices does not take the system to the equilibrium state. A nonequilibrium background of long wavelength spin waves remain at the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless temperature, an order of magnitude hotter than the equilibrium temperature. The coarsening continues through a second much slower scale invariant process with a length scale that grows with time as $t^{1/3}$. This second regime of coarsening is associated with spin wave energy transport from low to high wavevectors, bringing about the the eventual equilibrium state. Because the relevant spin waves are noninteracting, the transport occurs through a dynamic coupling to other degrees of freedom of the system. The transport displays features of a spin wave energy cascade, providing a potential profitable connection with the emerging field of spin wave turbulence. Strongly coupling the system to a reservoir destroys the second regime of coarsening, allowing the system to thermalise following the annihilation of vortices.
url https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.7.3.029
work_keys_str_mv AT lewisawilliamsonpblairblakie anomalousphaseorderingofaquenchedferromagneticsuperfluid
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