Controlled bit-flip of period-doubling and discrete time crystalline states in open systems
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2504.04900v1
- Date: Mon, 07 Apr 2025 10:19:55 GMT
- Title: Controlled bit-flip of period-doubling and discrete time crystalline states in open systems
- Authors: Roy D. Jara Jr., Phatthamon Kongkhambut, Hans Keßler, Andreas Hemmerich, Jayson G. Cosme,
- Abstract summary: robustness of bit-flip operation against thermal and quantum noise for bits represented by symmetry-broken pairs of the period-doubled (PD) states is studied.<n>We demonstrate this in a modified protocol based on precise quenches of the driving frequency.
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- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: In this work, we explore the robustness of a bit-flip operation against thermal and quantum noise for bits represented by the symmetry-broken pairs of the period-doubled (PD) states in a classical parametric oscillator and discrete time crystal (DTC) states in a fully-connected open spin-cavity system, respectively. The bit-flip operation corresponds to switching between the two PD and DTC states induced by a defect in a periodic drive, introduced in a controlled manner by linearly ramping the phase of the modulation of the drive. In the absence of stochastic noise, strong dissipation results in a more robust bit-flip operation in which slight changes to the defect parameters do not significantly lower the success rate of bit-flips. The operation remains robust even in the presence of stochastic noise when the defect duration is sufficiently large. The fluctuations also enhance the success rate of the bit-flip below the critical defect duration needed to induce a switch. By considering parameter regimes in which the DTC states in the spin-cavity system do not directly map to the PD states, we reveal that this robustness is due to the system being quenched by the defect towards a new phase that has enough excitation to suppress the effects of the stochastic noise. This allows for precise control of the bit-flip operations by tuning into the preferred intermediate state that the system will enter during a bit-flip operation. We demonstrate this in a modified protocol based on precise quenches of the driving frequency.
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