Observation of a Dissipative Phase Transition in a One-Dimensional Circuit QED Lattice

Condensed matter physics has been driven forward by significant experimental and theoretical progress in the study and understanding of equilibrium phase transitions based on symmetry and topology. However, nonequilibrium phase transitions have remained a challenge, in part due to their complexity i...

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Main Authors: Mattias Fitzpatrick, Neereja M. Sundaresan, Andy C. Y. Li, Jens Koch, Andrew A. Houck
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2017-02-01
Series:Physical Review X
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.7.011016
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spelling doaj-3db694ea7d61440588b732db1b8552f22020-11-25T00:56:36ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review X2160-33082017-02-017101101610.1103/PhysRevX.7.011016Observation of a Dissipative Phase Transition in a One-Dimensional Circuit QED LatticeMattias FitzpatrickNeereja M. SundaresanAndy C. Y. LiJens KochAndrew A. HouckCondensed matter physics has been driven forward by significant experimental and theoretical progress in the study and understanding of equilibrium phase transitions based on symmetry and topology. However, nonequilibrium phase transitions have remained a challenge, in part due to their complexity in theoretical descriptions and the additional experimental difficulties in systematically controlling systems out of equilibrium. Here, we study a one-dimensional chain of 72 microwave cavities, each coupled to a superconducting qubit, and coherently drive the system into a nonequilibrium steady state. We find experimental evidence for a dissipative phase transition in the system in which the steady state changes dramatically as the mean photon number is increased. Near the boundary between the two observed phases, the system demonstrates bistability, with characteristic switching times as long as 60 ms—far longer than any of the intrinsic rates known for the system. This experiment demonstrates the power of circuit QED systems for studying nonequilibrium condensed matter physics and paves the way for future experiments exploring nonequilbrium physics with many-body quantum optics.http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.7.011016
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mattias Fitzpatrick
Neereja M. Sundaresan
Andy C. Y. Li
Jens Koch
Andrew A. Houck
spellingShingle Mattias Fitzpatrick
Neereja M. Sundaresan
Andy C. Y. Li
Jens Koch
Andrew A. Houck
Observation of a Dissipative Phase Transition in a One-Dimensional Circuit QED Lattice
Physical Review X
author_facet Mattias Fitzpatrick
Neereja M. Sundaresan
Andy C. Y. Li
Jens Koch
Andrew A. Houck
author_sort Mattias Fitzpatrick
title Observation of a Dissipative Phase Transition in a One-Dimensional Circuit QED Lattice
title_short Observation of a Dissipative Phase Transition in a One-Dimensional Circuit QED Lattice
title_full Observation of a Dissipative Phase Transition in a One-Dimensional Circuit QED Lattice
title_fullStr Observation of a Dissipative Phase Transition in a One-Dimensional Circuit QED Lattice
title_full_unstemmed Observation of a Dissipative Phase Transition in a One-Dimensional Circuit QED Lattice
title_sort observation of a dissipative phase transition in a one-dimensional circuit qed lattice
publisher American Physical Society
series Physical Review X
issn 2160-3308
publishDate 2017-02-01
description Condensed matter physics has been driven forward by significant experimental and theoretical progress in the study and understanding of equilibrium phase transitions based on symmetry and topology. However, nonequilibrium phase transitions have remained a challenge, in part due to their complexity in theoretical descriptions and the additional experimental difficulties in systematically controlling systems out of equilibrium. Here, we study a one-dimensional chain of 72 microwave cavities, each coupled to a superconducting qubit, and coherently drive the system into a nonequilibrium steady state. We find experimental evidence for a dissipative phase transition in the system in which the steady state changes dramatically as the mean photon number is increased. Near the boundary between the two observed phases, the system demonstrates bistability, with characteristic switching times as long as 60 ms—far longer than any of the intrinsic rates known for the system. This experiment demonstrates the power of circuit QED systems for studying nonequilibrium condensed matter physics and paves the way for future experiments exploring nonequilbrium physics with many-body quantum optics.
url http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.7.011016
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