Ground-state selection via many-body superradiant decay
Creators
Abstract
For a single particle, relaxation into different ground states is governed by fixed branching ratios determined by the transition matrix element and the environment. Here, we show that in many-body open quantum systems the occupation probability of one ground state can be boosted well beyond what is dictated by single-particle branching ratios. Despite the competition, interactions suppress all but the dominant decay transition, leading to a "winner takes all" dynamic where the system primarily settles into the dominant ground state. We prove that, in the presence of permutation symmetry, this problem is exactly solvable for any number of competing channels. Additionally, we develop an approximate model for the dynamics by mapping the evolution onto a fluid continuity equation, and analytically demonstrate that the dominant transition ratio converges to unity as a power law with increasing system size, for any branching ratios. This near-deterministic preparation of the dominant ground state has broad applicability. As an example, we discuss a protocol for molecular photoassociation where collective dynamics effectively acts as a catalyst, amplifying the yield in a specific final state. Our results open different avenues for many-body strategies in the preparation and control of quantum systems.
Copyright and License
Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article’s title, journal citation, and DOI.
Acknowledgement
We thank Kon Leung, Luis A. Orozco, and Maximilian Schemmer for helpful discussions. We acknowledge support by the National Science Foundation through the CAREER Award (No. 2047380) and the QLCI program (Grant No. OMA-2016245), the Air Force Office of Scientific Research through their Young Investigator Prize (Grant No. 21RT0751) and through Grant No. FA9550-1910328, ARO through the MURI program (Grant No. W911NF-20-1-0136), DARPA (Grant No. W911NF2010090), as well as by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation and the Brown Science Foundation. The Institute for Quantum Information and Matter is an NSF Physics Frontiers Center.
Supplemental Material
Supplemental Material: Additional details which include explicit calculations for non-collective decay and integrability of the rate equation.
Files
PhysRevResearch.7.L022015.pdf
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Additional details
Additional titles
- Alternative title
- Collective transition quenching in the presence of multiple competing decay channels
Related works
- Is new version of
- Discussion Paper: arXiv:2407.04129 (arXiv)
- Is supplemented by
- Supplemental Material: https://journals.aps.org/prresearch/supplemental/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.7.L022015/supp.pdf (URL)
Funding
- National Science Foundation
- 2047380
- National Science Foundation
- OMA-2016245
- United States Air Force Office of Scientific Research
- 21RT0751
- United States Air Force Office of Scientific Research
- FA9550-1910328
- United States Army Research Office
- W911NF-20-1-0136
- Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
- W911NF2010090
- David and Lucile Packard Foundation
- Brown Science Foundation
Dates
- Accepted
-
2025-02-12