Nonequilibrium phase transition in a two-dimensional driven open quantum syste

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Abstract

The Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless mechanism, in which a phase transition is mediated by the proliferation of topological defects, governs the critical behavior of a wide range of equilibrium twodimensional systems with a continuous symmetry, ranging from spin systems to superconducting thin films and two-dimensional Bose fluids, such as liquid helium and ultracold atoms. We show here that this phenomenon is not restricted to thermal equilibrium, rather it survives more generally in a dissipative highly nonequilibrium system driven into a steady state. By considering a quantum fluid of polaritons of an experimentally relevant size, in the so-called optical parametric oscillator regime, we demonstrate that it indeed undergoes a phase transition associated with a vortex binding-unbinding mechanism. Yet, the exponent of the power-law decay of the first-order correlation function in the (algebraically) ordered phase can exceed the equilibrium upper limit: this shows that the ordered phase of driven-dissipative systems can sustain a higher level of collective excitations before the order is destroyed by topological defects. Our work suggests that the macroscopic coherence phenomena, observed recently in interacting twodimensional light-matter systems, result from a nonequilibrium phase transition of the Berezinskii- Kosterlitz-Thouless rather than the Bose-Einstein condensation type.

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Dagvadorj, G., Fellows, J. M., Matyjaśkiewicz, S., Marchetti, F. M., Carusotto, I., & Szymańska, M. H. (2015). Nonequilibrium phase transition in a two-dimensional driven open quantum syste. Physical Review X, 5(4). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.5.041028

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