Non-Equilibrium Quantum Dynamics in a Disordered Ising Magnet

Author: Simon, Christopher

Year: 2024

Degree: Dissertation (Ph.D.)

Advisor: Rosenbaum, Thomas F.

Committee Members: Endres, Manuel A.; Refael, Gil; Minnich, Austin J.; Rosenbaum, Thomas F.

Option: Applied Physics

DOI: 10.7907/tm3k-yk55

Abstract

The quantum two-level system, or “qubit,” is a simple platform that nonetheless displays fundamentally non-trivial quantum behavior. The rare-earth magnet LiHoF₄ is a natural physical representation of a system of coupled qubits. With its uncommonly high crystal anisotropy, LiHoF₄ can be mapped to the problem of the Ising model in a transverse field. However, while this Ising approximation can quantitatively predict much of the equilibrium behavior, quantum corrections, originating from off-diagonal terms in the dipolar interaction that generate quantum fluctuations, are crucial in driving non-equilibrium dynamics when subject to an external drive. Furthermore, quenched disorder can be introduced through chemical substitution, which, through the dipolar interaction, generates spatially random pinning fields, as well as internal transverse fields, which drive quantum fluctuations. Noise measurements on the disordered ferromagnet LiHo0.65Y0.35F4 show critical behavior, whose statistics are driven from the underlying pinning distribution, while measurements on LiHo0.40Y0.60F4 display non-critical behavior that can only be attributed to quantum co-tunneling processes. This is the first demonstration of crackling noise in a ferromagnet in the purely quantum regime. Furthermore, pump-probe susceptibility measurements on the decoupled cluster glass show the system being driven out of equilibrium with astonishingly weak drives, due to resonant transitions arising from off-diagonal dipolar terms σiz σjx. Non-linear sample response is observable in inelastic Raman scattering measurements, and these spin clusters also exhibit asymmetric Fano resonances with high Q-factors of ~10⁵. Quantum interference effects can be tuned to fully decouple one of the dressed states from the others, rendering the sample transparent to the drive. This is analogous to optical systems that display electromagnetically-induced transparency, but at 100 Hz frequencies!

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