Oscillating potential well in complex plane and the adiabatic theorem
Stefano Longhi

TL;DR
This paper investigates how a quantum particle in a slowly shaken potential well, especially with complex (non-Hermitian) oscillations, causes the adiabatic theorem to fail, revealing different nonadiabatic mechanisms in Hermitian and non-Hermitian cases.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of adiabatic breakdown in complex-plane oscillating potentials, highlighting distinct physical mechanisms for Hermitian and non-Hermitian shaking.
Findings
Adiabatic theorem fails near odd resonances for both shaking types.
Hermitian shaking causes avoided crossings and Rabi flopping.
Non-Hermitian shaking leads to Floquet exceptional points at energy crossings.
Abstract
A quantum particle in a slowly-changing potential well , periodically shaken in time at a slow frequency , provides an important quantum mechanical system where the adiabatic theorem fails to predict the asymptotic dynamics over time scales longer than . Specifically, we consider a double-well potential sustaining two bound states spaced in frequency by and periodically-shaken in complex plane. Two different spatial displacements are assumed: the real spatial displacement , corresponding to ordinary Hermitian shaking, and the complex one , corresponding to non-Hermitian shaking. When the particle is initially prepared in the ground state of the potential well, breakdown of adiabatic evolution is found for both Hermitian and…
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