Emergent time crystals from phase-space noncommutative quantum mechanics

Abstract

It has been argued that the existence of time crystals requires a spontaneous breakdown of the continuous time translation symmetry so to account for the unexpected non-stationary behavior of quantum observables in the ground state. Our point is that such effects do emerge from position (qi) and/or momentum (pi) noncommutativity, i.e., from [qi,\,qj]≠ 0 and/or [pi,\,pj]≠ 0 (for i≠ j). In such a context, a predictive analysis is carried out for the 2-dim noncommutative quantum harmonic oscillator through a procedure supported by the Weyl-Wigner-Groenewold-Moyal framework. This allows for the understanding of how the phase-space noncommutativity drives the amplitude of periodic oscillations identified as time crystals. A natural extension of our analysis also shows how the spontaneous formation of time quasi-crystals can arise.

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