Dynamical metastability and transient topological magnons in interacting driven-dissipative magnetic systems
Vincent P. Flynn, Lorenza Viola, Benedetta Flebus

TL;DR
This paper explores dynamical metastability and topological magnon phenomena in interacting driven-dissipative magnetic systems, revealing long-lived edge states and nonlinear effects relevant for spintronics and magnonic devices.
Contribution
It extends the concept of dynamical metastability into nonlinear, interacting regimes and demonstrates its persistence and control in magnetic heterostructures.
Findings
Long-lived topological edge states persist under nonlinearities and disorder.
Size-dependent spin dipping and anomalous attraction to unstable equilibria observed.
Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction and spin-transfer torque control bulk-boundary stability.
Abstract
Metastability, i.e., partial relaxation to long-lived, quasi-stationary states before true asymptotic equilibrium sets in, emerges ubiquitously in classical and quantum dynamical systems as a result of timescales separation. In open quantum systems, an intrinsically nonequilibrium analogue, dynamical metastability, can originate from the spectral geometry of a non-Hermitian operator. In noninteracting models, this mechanism produces boundary-sensitive anomalous relaxation, transient amplification, and topologically mandated long-lived edge modes, all of which are enhanced as system size grows. Here we extend dynamical metastability into the nonlinear, interacting regime and identify magnetic heterostructures as a natural platform for its exploration. We introduce an interacting spin Lindbladian whose linearized magnon dynamics map onto a dynamically metastable Hatano-Nelson chain, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Quantum many-body systems · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
