Nonlinear two-level dynamics of quantum time crystals

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Abstract

A time crystal is a macroscopic quantum system in periodic motion in its ground state. In our experiments, two coupled time crystals consisting of spin-wave quasiparticles (magnons) form a macroscopic two-level system. The two levels evolve in time as determined intrinsically by a nonlinear feedback, allowing us to construct spontaneous two-level dynamics. In the course of a level crossing, magnons move from the ground level to the excited level driven by the Landau-Zener effect, combined with Rabi population oscillations. We demonstrate that magnon time crystals allow access to every aspect and detail of quantum-coherent interactions in a single run of the experiment. Our work opens an outlook for the detection of surface-bound Majorana fermions in the underlying superfluid system, and invites technological exploitation of coherent magnon phenomena – potentially even at room temperature.

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Autti, S., Heikkinen, P. J., Nissinen, J., Mäkinen, J. T., Volovik, G. E., Zavyalov, V. V., & Eltsov, V. B. (2022). Nonlinear two-level dynamics of quantum time crystals. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-30783-w

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