Classical Discrete Time Crystals
Norman Y. Yao, Chetan Nayak, Leon Balents, Michael P. Zaletel

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether classical dynamical systems can exhibit a form of time-translation symmetry breaking similar to quantum discrete time crystals, revealing a classical phase transition driven by noise and interactions.
Contribution
It demonstrates the existence of a classical discrete time crystal phase in driven Hamiltonian chains with noise, showing a sharp first-order transition and critical behavior.
Findings
Evidence of a classical time-translation symmetry breaking phase.
Identification of a first-order dynamical phase transition.
Mapping the transition to a charge density wave sliding transition.
Abstract
The spontaneous breaking of time-translation symmetry in periodically driven quantum systems leads to a new phase of matter: discrete time crystals (DTC). This phase exhibits collective subharmonic oscillations that depend upon an interplay of non-equilibrium driving, many-body interactions, and the breakdown of ergodicity. However, subharmonic responses are also a well-known feature of classical dynamical systems ranging from predator-prey models to Faraday waves and AC-driven charge density waves. This raises the question of whether these classical phenomena display the same rigidity characteristic of a quantum DTC. In this work, we explore this question in the context of periodically driven Hamiltonian dynamics coupled to a finite-temperature bath, which provides both friction and, crucially, noise. Focusing on one-dimensional chains, where in equilibrium any transition would be…
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