Universality class of Ising critical states with long-range losses
Abstract
We show that spatial resolved dissipation can act on d-dimensional spin systems in the Ising universality class by qualitatively modifying the nature of their critical points. We consider power-law decaying spin losses with a Lindbladian spectrum closing at small momenta as qα, with α a positive tunable exponent directly related to the power-law decay of the spatial profile of losses at long distances, 1/r(α+d). This yields a class of soft modes asymptotically decoupled from dissipation at small momenta, which are responsible for the emergence of a critical scaling regime ascribable to the non-unitary counterpart of the universality class of long-range interacting Ising models. For α<1 we find a non-equilibrium critical point ruled by a dynamical field theory described by a Langevin model with coexisting inertial ( ∂2t) and frictional ( ∂t) kinetic coefficients, and driven by a gapless Markovian noise with variance qα at small momenta. This effective field theory is beyond the Halperin-Hohenberg description of dynamical criticality, and its critical exponents differ from their unitary long-range counterparts. Our work lays out perspectives for a revision of universality in driven-open systems by employing dark states taylored by programmable dissipation.
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