Observation of a Discrete Time Crystal

ORAL

Abstract

Spontaneous symmetry breaking is a key concept in the understanding of many physical phenomena, such as the formation of spatial crystals and the phase transition from paramagnetism to magnetic order. While the breaking of time translation symmetry is forbidden in equilibrium systems, it is possible for non-equilibrium Floquet driven systems to break a discrete time translation symmetry, and we present clear signatures of the formation of such a discrete time crystal. We apply a time periodic Hamiltonian to a chain of interacting spins under many-body localization conditions and observe the system's sub-harmonic response at twice that period. This spontaneous doubling of the periodicity is robust to external perturbations. We represent the spins with a linear chain of trapped $^{\mathrm{171}}$Yb$^{\mathrm{+}}$ ions in an rf Paul trap, generate spin-spin interactions through spin-dependent optical dipole forces, and measure each spin using state-dependent fluorescence.

Authors

  • A. Kyprianidis

    Joint Quantum Institute and U. of Maryland Dept. of Physics

  • J. Zhang

    Joint Quantum Insititute, University of Maryland-College Park, Joint Quantum Institute and U. of Maryland Dept. of Physics

  • P. Hess

    Joint Quantum Institute and U. of Maryland Dept. of Physics

  • P. Becker

    Joint Quantum Institute and U. of Maryland Dept. of Physics

  • A. Lee

    Joint Quantum Institute and U. of Maryland Dept. of Physics

  • J. Smith

    Joint Quantum Institute and U. of Maryland Dept. of Physics

  • G. Pagano

    Joint Quantum Institute and U. of Maryland Dept. of Physics

  • A. Potter

    Dept of Physics, U. of Texas at Austin

  • A. Vishwanath

    Dept of Physics, Harvard University

  • I.-D. Potirniche

    Dept of Physics, U. of California-Berkeley

  • N. Yao

    University of California, Berkeley, Department of Physics, UC Berkeley, University of California - Berkeley, Dept of Physics, U. of California-Berkeley

  • C. Monroe

    Joint Quantum Institute and U. of Maryland Dept. of Physics