Synchronization in rotating supersolids
Abstract
Synchronization is ubiquitous in nature at various scales and fields. This phenomenon not only offers a window into the intrinsic harmony of complex systems, but also serves as a robust probe for many-body quantum systems. One such system is a supersolid: an exotic state that is simultaneously superfluid and solid. Here, we show that putting a supersolid under rotation leads to a synchronization of the crystal's motion to an external driving frequency triggered by quantum vortex nucleation, revealing the system's dual solid-superfluid response. Benchmarking the theoretical framework against experimental observations, we exploit this model as a novel method to investigate the critical frequency required for vortex nucleation. Our results underscore the utility of synchronization as a powerful probe for quantum systems.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2412.11976,
title = {Synchronization in rotating supersolids},
author = {Elena Poli and Andrea Litvinov and Eva Casotti and Clemens Ulm and Lauritz Klaus and Manfred J. Mark and Giacomo Lamporesi and Thomas Bland and Francesca Ferlaino},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2412.11976},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
11 pages, 10 figures