Abstract

Driven-dissipative systems are expected to give rise to nonequilibrium phenomena that are absent in their equilibrium counterparts. However, phase transitions in these systems generically exhibit an effectively classical equilibrium behavior in spite of their nonequilibrium origin. In this paper, we show that multicritical points in such systems lead to a rich and genuinely nonequilibrium behavior. Specifically, we investigate a driven-dissipative model of interacting bosons that possesses two distinct phase transitions: one from a high- to a low-density phase—reminiscent of a liquid-gas transition—and another to an antiferromagnetic phase. Each phase transition is described by the Ising universality class characterized by an (emergent or microscopic) symmetry. However, they coalesce at a multicritical point, giving rise to a nonequilibrium model of coupled Ising-like order parameters described by a symmetry. Using a dynamical renormalization-group approach, we show that a pair of nonequilibrium fixed points (NEFPs) emerge that govern the long-distance critical behavior of the system. We elucidate various exotic features of these NEFPs. In particular, we show that a generic continuous scale invariance at criticality is reduced to a discrete scale invariance. This further results in complex-valued critical exponents and spiraling phase boundaries, and it is also accompanied by a complex Liouvillian gap even close to the phase transition. As direct evidence of the nonequilibrium nature of the NEFPs, we show that the fluctuation-dissipation relation is violated at all scales, leading to an effective temperature that becomes “hotter” and “hotter” at longer and longer wavelengths. Finally, we argue that this nonequilibrium behavior can be observed in cavity arrays with cross-Kerr nonlinearities.

Highlights

  • The increasing control over synthetic quantum systems has provided new avenues into studying many-body physics that are not accessible in conventional condensed matter systems

  • The bistable region is reduced to a line of first-order phase transitions that terminates at a critical point, reminiscent of a liquid-gas phase transition

  • We consider a model where these phase transitions coalesce at a multicritical point and investigate the exotic dynamics that arise due to the interplay of the respective order parameters

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Summary

Introduction

The increasing control over synthetic quantum systems has provided new avenues into studying many-body physics that are not accessible in conventional condensed matter systems. Driven-dissipative systems, defined by the competition between a coherent drive and dissipation due to the coupling to the environment, have emerged as a versatile setting to investigate nonequilibrium physics [1]. The quest to realize and characterize macroscopic phases of these nonequilibrium systems has sparked a flurry of theoretical and experimental investigations

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