Emergent equilibrium in many-body optical bistability

M. Foss-Feig, P. Niroula, J. T. Young, M. Hafezi, A. V. Gorshkov, R. M. Wilson, and M. F. Maghrebi
Phys. Rev. A 95, 043826 – Published 17 April 2017

Abstract

Many-body systems constructed of quantum-optical building blocks can now be realized in experimental platforms ranging from exciton-polariton fluids to ultracold Rydberg gases, establishing a fascinating interface between traditional many-body physics and the driven-dissipative, nonequilibrium setting of cavity QED. At this interface, the standard techniques and intuitions of both fields are called into question, obscuring issues as fundamental as the role of fluctuations, dimensionality, and symmetry on the nature of collective behavior and phase transitions. Here, we study the driven-dissipative Bose-Hubbard model, a minimal description of numerous atomic, optical, and solid-state systems in which particle loss is countered by coherent driving. Despite being a lattice version of optical bistability, a foundational and patently nonequilibrium model of cavity QED, the steady state possesses an emergent equilibrium description in terms of a classical Ising model. We establish this picture by making new connections between traditional techniques from many-body physics (functional integrals) and quantum optics (the system-size expansion). To lowest order in a controlled expansion—organized around the experimentally relevant limit of weak interactions—the full quantum dynamics reduces to nonequilibrium Langevin equations, which support a phase transition described by model A of the Hohenberg-Halperin classification. Numerical simulations of the Langevin equations corroborate this picture, revealing that canonical behavior associated with the Ising model manifests readily in simple experimental observables.

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  • Received 3 November 2016
  • Revised 10 January 2017

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.95.043826

©2017 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Atomic, Molecular & OpticalQuantum Information, Science & TechnologyStatistical Physics & ThermodynamicsCondensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Authors & Affiliations

M. Foss-Feig1,2,3, P. Niroula2,4, J. T. Young2, M. Hafezi2,5, A. V. Gorshkov2,3, R. M. Wilson6, and M. F. Maghrebi2,3,7

  • 1United States Army Research Laboratory, Adelphi, Maryland 20783, USA
  • 2Joint Quantum Institute, NIST and University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, USA
  • 3Joint Center for Quantum Information and Computer Science, NIST and University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, USA
  • 4Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA
  • 5Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Institute for Research in Electronics and Applied Physics, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, USA
  • 6Department of Physics, United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland 21402, USA
  • 7Department of Physics and Astronomy, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824, USA

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Issue

Vol. 95, Iss. 4 — April 2017

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