Spectroscopic probes of isolated nonequilibrium quantum matter: Quantum quenches, Floquet states, and distribution functions
Yunxiang Liao, Matthew S. Foster

TL;DR
This paper explores how spectroscopic techniques reveal the properties of isolated nonequilibrium quantum systems, focusing on Floquet states in a quenched 2D superfluid and their experimental signatures.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of spectroscopic probes for nonequilibrium quantum phases, emphasizing the role of the distribution function in Floquet topological states after a quench.
Findings
RF spectra show a robust gap in the Floquet phase.
Population inversion occurs at low energies, affecting the spectral features.
Tunneling signals can reveal Majorana edge states in topological phases.
Abstract
We investigate radio-frequency (rf) spectroscopy, metal-to-superconductor tunneling, and ARPES as probes of isolated out-of-equilibrium quantum systems, and examine the crucial role played by the nonequilibrium distribution function. As an example, we focus on the induced topological time-periodic (Floquet) phase in a 2D superfluid, following an instantaneous quench of the coupling strength. The post-quench Cooper pairs occupy a linear combination of "ground" and "excited" Floquet states, with coefficients determined by the distribution function. While the Floquet bandstructure exhibits a single avoided crossing relative to the equilibrium case, the distribution function shows a population inversion of the Floquet bands at low energies. For a realization in ultracold atoms, these two features compensate, producing a bulk average rf signal that is well-captured by a…
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