A class of systems exists in which dissipation, external drive and interactions compete and give rise to non-equilibrium phases that would not exist without the drive. There, phase transitions could occur without the breaking of any symmetry, yet with a local order parameter—in contrast to the Landau theory of phase transitions at equilibrium. One of the simplest driven–dissipative quantum systems consists of two-level atoms enclosed in a volume smaller than the wavelength of the atomic transition cubed, driven by a light field. The competition between collective coupling of the atoms to the driving field and their cooperative decay should lead to a transition between a phase where all the atomic dipoles are phase-locked and a phase governed by superradiant spontaneous emission. Here, we realize this model using a pencil-shaped cloud of laser-cooled atoms in free space, optically excited along its main axis, and observe the predicted phases. Our demonstration is promising in view of obtaining free-space superradiant lasers or observing new types of time crystal.
A non-equilibrium superradiant phase transition in free space / Ferioli, Giovanni; Glicenstein, Antoine; Ferrier-Barbut, Igor; Browaeys, Antoine. - In: NATURE PHYSICS. - ISSN 1745-2473. - ELETTRONICO. - 19:(2023), pp. 1345-1349. [10.1038/s41567-023-02064-w]
A non-equilibrium superradiant phase transition in free space
Ferioli, Giovanni
;Browaeys, Antoine
2023
Abstract
A class of systems exists in which dissipation, external drive and interactions compete and give rise to non-equilibrium phases that would not exist without the drive. There, phase transitions could occur without the breaking of any symmetry, yet with a local order parameter—in contrast to the Landau theory of phase transitions at equilibrium. One of the simplest driven–dissipative quantum systems consists of two-level atoms enclosed in a volume smaller than the wavelength of the atomic transition cubed, driven by a light field. The competition between collective coupling of the atoms to the driving field and their cooperative decay should lead to a transition between a phase where all the atomic dipoles are phase-locked and a phase governed by superradiant spontaneous emission. Here, we realize this model using a pencil-shaped cloud of laser-cooled atoms in free space, optically excited along its main axis, and observe the predicted phases. Our demonstration is promising in view of obtaining free-space superradiant lasers or observing new types of time crystal.I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



