Higher-order and fractional discrete time crystals in clean long-range interacting systems

ORAL

Abstract

Discrete time crystals are periodically driven systems characterized by a response with periodicity nT, with T the period of the drive and n>1. Typically, n is an integer and bounded from above by the dimension of the local (or single particle) Hilbert space, the most prominent example being spin-1/2 systems with n restricted to 2. Here we show that a clean spin-1/2 system in the presence of long-range interactions and transverse field can sustain a huge variety of different 'higher-order' discrete time crystals with integer and, surprisingly, even fractional n>2. We characterize these non-equilibrium phases of matter thoroughly using a combination of exact diagonalization, semiclassical methods, and spin-wave approximations, which enable us to establish their stability in the presence of competing long- and short-range interactions. Remarkably, these phases emerge in a model with continous driving and time-independent interactions, convenient for experimental implementations with ultracold atoms or trapped ions.

*A.P. acknowledges support from the Royal Society. A.N. holds a University Research Fellowship from the Royal Society and acknowledges additional support from the Winton Programme for the Physics of Sustainability.

Presenters

  • Andrea Pizzi

    • Univ of Cambridge

Authors

  • Andrea Pizzi

    • Univ of Cambridge
  • Johannes Knolle

    • Physics, Technical University of Munich
    • Technical University Munich
    • Department of Physics, Technical University of Munich
    • Imperial College London
  • Andreas Nunnenkamp

    • Univ of Cambridge
    • Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge