Stochastic Resonance Spectroscopy: Characterizing Fast Dynamics with Slow Measurements
Nicolaj Betz, Gregory McMurtrie, Max H\"anze, Vivek Krishnakumar Rajathilakam, La\"etitia Farinacci, Susan N. Coppersmith, Susanne Baumann, Sebastian Loth

TL;DR
Stochastic resonance spectroscopy (SRS) is introduced as a method to measure fast internal dynamics of quantum systems over a broad frequency range using slow, periodic external perturbations, with applications demonstrated on atomic-scale magnetic and quasiparticle systems.
Contribution
The paper presents SRS, an analytical method enabling quantitative measurement of rapid transition rates in quantum systems through slow, periodic driving, applicable across diverse systems.
Findings
Successfully applied SRS to magnetic atom spin switching.
Quantified Neel state reversal in nano-antiferromagnets.
Measured quasiparticle transport in Yu-Shiba-Rusinov states.
Abstract
A system's internal dynamics and its interaction with the environment can be determined by tracking how external perturbations affect its transition rates between states. Quantitative measurements of these rates are crucial for optimizing quantum systems at the atomic scale but are challenging, as these dynamics are often faster than experimental observation capabilities. Here, we show that driving a stochastic system periodically enables quantitative determination of its transition rates over a wide frequency range spanning from kilohertz to gigahertz. To perform this quantitative extraction, we provide an analytical model that is applicable irrespective of the details of the studied system. We name this method stochastic resonance spectroscopy (SRS). We apply it to quantify spin switching in individual magnetic atoms, Neel state reversal in nano-antiferromagnets and quasiparticle…
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Taxonomy
Topicsstochastic dynamics and bifurcation
