English

Markovian dissipation can stabilize a (localization) quantum phase transition

Quantum Gases 2025-05-30 v1 Quantum Physics

Abstract

Quantum phase transitions are a cornerstone of many-body physics at low temperatures but have remained elusive far from equilibrium. Driven open quantum systems -- a prominent non-equilibrium platform where coherent dynamics competes with Markovian dissipation from the environment -- often exhibit an effective classical behavior. In this work, we present a nontrivial quantum phase transition that is stabilized, rather than destroyed, by Markovian dissipation. We consider a variant of the paradigmatic spin-boson model where the spin is driven and bosons are subject to Markovian loss proportional to frequency (hence, vanishing at low frequencies). We show that the steady state exhibits a localization phase transition where the spin's dynamics is frozen, to be contrasted with the ground-state transition in the absence of dissipation. Furthermore, this transition occurs when the steady state becomes pure. The latter is not simply a dark state of dissipation but rather emerges from a nontrivial renormalization of the spin dynamics by low-frequency bosonic modes. Our work provides a nontrivial example where quantumness, typically reserved for ground states, also emerges in dynamical settings, with potential applications in quantum computation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2505.22721,
  title  = {Markovian dissipation can stabilize a (localization) quantum phase transition},
  author = {Naushad A. Kamar and Mostafa Ali and Mohammad Maghrebi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2505.22721},
  year   = {2025}
}
R2 v1 2026-07-01T02:47:06.906Z