Quantum and classical coarsening and their interplay with the Kibble-Zurek mechanism

ORAL

Abstract

Understanding the out-of-equilibrium dynamics of a closed quantum system driven across a quantum phase transition is an important problem with widespread implications for quantum state preparation and adiabatic algorithms. While the quantum Kibble-Zurek mechanism elucidates part of these dynamics, the subsequent and significant coarsening processes lie beyond its scope. Here, we develop a universal description of such coarsening dynamics—and their interplay with the Kibble-Zurek mechanism—in terms of scaling theories. Our comprehensive theoretical framework applies to a diverse set of ramp protocols and encompasses various coarsening scenarios involving both quantum and thermal fluctuations. Moreover, we highlight how such coarsening dynamics can be directly studied in today's "synthetic" quantum many-body systems, including Rydberg atom arrays, and present a detailed proposal for their experimental observation.

* R.S. is supported by the Princeton Quantum Initiative Fellowship. D.A.H. is supported in part by NSF QLCI grant OMA- 2120757.

Presenters

  • Rhine Samajdar

    Princeton University

Authors

  • Rhine Samajdar

    Princeton University

  • David A Huse

    Princeton University