Alexander Osterkorn, Constantin Meyer, Salvatore R. Manmana
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In-gap band formation in a periodically driven charge density wave insulator
Modern time-resolved spectroscopy experiments on quantum materials raise the question, how strong electron-electron interactions, in combination with periodic driving, form unconventional transient states. Here we show using numerically exact methods that in a driven strongly interacting charge-density-wave insulator a band-like resonance in the gap region is formed. We associate this feature to the so-called Villain mode in quantum-magnetic materials, which originates in moving domain walls induced by the interaction. We do not obtain the in-gap band when driving a non-interacting charge density wave model. In contrast, it appears in the interacting system also in equilibrium at intermediate temperatures and in the short-time evolution of the system after a quantum quench to the lowest-order high-frequency effective Floquet Hamiltonian. Our findings connect the phenomenology of a periodically driven strongly correlated system and its quench dynamics to the finite-temperature dynamical response of quantum-magnetic materials and will be insightful for future investigations of strongly correlated materials in pump-probe setups. The interplay of strong electronic interactions and periodic driving leads to new effects in nonequilibrium quantum-many body systems. The authors find an in-gap band, which is due to moving domain walls, similar to the so-called Villain-mode of quantum magnets.
期刊介绍:
Communications Physics is an open access journal from Nature Research publishing high-quality research, reviews and commentary in all areas of the physical sciences. Research papers published by the journal represent significant advances bringing new insight to a specialized area of research in physics. We also aim to provide a community forum for issues of importance to all physicists, regardless of sub-discipline.
The scope of the journal covers all areas of experimental, applied, fundamental, and interdisciplinary physical sciences. Primary research published in Communications Physics includes novel experimental results, new techniques or computational methods that may influence the work of others in the sub-discipline. We also consider submissions from adjacent research fields where the central advance of the study is of interest to physicists, for example material sciences, physical chemistry and technologies.