Article,
Dissipative time crystal in a strongly interacting Rydberg gas
Affiliations
- [1] Tsinghua University [NORA names: China; Asia, East];
- [2] Aarhus University [NORA names: AU Aarhus University; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
- [3] University of Science and Technology of China [NORA names: China; Asia, East];
- [4] Beijing Academy of Quantum Information Sciences [NORA names: China; Asia, East];
- [5] TU Wien [NORA names: Austria; Europe, EU; OECD]
Abstract
The notion of spontaneous symmetry breaking has been well established to characterize classical and quantum phase transitions of matter, such as condensation, crystallization or quantum magnetism. Generalizations of this paradigm to the time dimension can lead to a time crystal phase, which spontaneously breaks the time-translation symmetry of the system. Although the existence of a continuous time crystal at equilibrium has been challenged by no-go theorems, this difficulty can be circumvented by dissipation in an open system. Here we report the experimental observation of such a dissipative time-crystalline order in a room-temperature atomic gas, where ground-state atoms are continuously driven to Rydberg states. The emergent time crystal is revealed by persistent oscillations of the photon transmission, and we show that the observed limit cycles arise from the coexistence and competition between distinct Rydberg components. The non-decaying autocorrelation of the oscillation, together with the robustness against temporal noises, indicates the establishment of true long-range temporal order and demonstrates the realization of a continuous time crystal.