Estimating heating times in periodically driven quantum many-body systems via avoided crossing spectroscopy
Artem Rakcheev, Andreas M. L\"auchli

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method to estimate heating times in periodically driven quantum many-body systems by analyzing avoided level crossings, enabling more accurate predictions of system stability in Floquet engineering.
Contribution
The authors develop a microscopic approach based on avoided crossing spectroscopy that surpasses traditional perturbative methods for calculating heating times in driven quantum systems.
Findings
The method accurately resolves individual avoided crossings.
It can predict heating times beyond weak drive approximations.
Applicable to complex scenarios like discrete time crystals.
Abstract
Periodic driving of a quantum (or classical) many-body system can alter the systems properties significantly and therefore has emerged as a promising way to engineer exotic quantum phases, such as topological insulators and discrete time crystals. A major limitation in such setups, is that generally interacting, driven systems will heat up over time and lose the desired properties. Understanding the relevant time scales is thus an important topic in the field and so far, there have only been few approaches to determine heating times for a concrete system quantitatively, and in a computationally efficient way. In this article we propose a new approach, based on building the heating rate from microscopic processes, encoded in avoided level crossings of the Floquet propagator. We develop a method able to resolve individual crossings and show how to construct the heating rate based on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum many-body systems · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies
