Spectroscopy of Quantum Phase Slips: Visualizing Complex Real-Time Instantons
Abstract
Parametrically driven oscillators can emerge as a basis for the next generation of qubits. Classically, these systems exhibit two stable oscillatory states with opposite phases. Upon quantization, these states turn into a pair of closely spaced Floquet states, which can serve as the logical basis for a qubit. However, interaction with the environment induces phase-slip events which set a limit on qubit coherence. Such phase slips persist even at zero temperature due to a mechanism known as quantum activation \cite{QuantumActivation}. In contrast to conventional tunneling, the quantum activation is described by a {\em real-time} instanton trajectory in the complexified phase space of the system. In this work, we show that the phase-slip rate is exponentially sensitive to weak AC perturbations. The spectrum of the system's response -- captured by the so-called logarithmic susceptibility (LS) -- enables a direct observation of characteristic features of real-time instantons. Studying this spectrum suggests new means of efficient qubit control.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2512.24495,
title = {Spectroscopy of Quantum Phase Slips: Visualizing Complex Real-Time Instantons},
author = {Foster Thompson and Daniel K. J. Boneß and Mark Dykman and Alex Kamenev},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2512.24495},
year = {2026}
}